enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Eating disorders and memory - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eating_disorders_and_memory

    Eating disorders (EDs) are characterized by abnormal and disturbed eating patterns that affect the lives of the individuals who worry about their weight to the extreme. These abnormal eating patterns involve either inadequate or excessive food intake, affecting the individual's physical and mental health.

  3. Good Girls: A Story and Study of Anorexia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Good_Girls:_A_story_and...

    In The Jewish Chronicle Jennifer Lipman praised Freeman for her journalistic rigour which "[makes] this not just a misery memoir but an examination of the causes and consequences of anorexia", noting how the book "highlights important questions over the links between anorexia and autism, or anorexia and gender dysphoria as it presents in girls ...

  4. Eating disorder - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eating_disorder

    Anorexia affects about 0.4% and bulimia affects about 1.3% of young women in a given year. [1] Up to 4% of women have anorexia, 2% have bulimia, and 2% have binge eating disorder at some point in time. [10] Anorexia and bulimia occur nearly ten times more often in females than males. [1] Typically, they begin in late childhood or early ...

  5. Letting Ana Go - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Letting_Ana_Go

    Letting Ana Go is a 2013 book about a girl suffering from anorexia nervosa, published anonymously with no discernible author.The main character, "Ana", is a sophomore student and athletic track star who keeps a strict food diary and finds herself growing increasingly distant from her own family, while her own mother struggles with newfound morbid obesity and separation from her husband.

  6. Anorectic - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anorectic

    An anorectic is a drug that reduces appetite, resulting in lower food consumption, leading to weight loss. [1] These substances work by affecting the central nervous system or certain neurotransmitters to create a feeling of fullness or reduce the desire to eat.

  7. The Best Little Girl in the World (novel) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Best_Little_Girl_in...

    One such example was a criticism from Erica Kanesaka, writing for Ms. Magazine, who stated, "In high school, I used to go to the public library after school and run my fingers along the spines of the small section of books they carried on adolescent trauma and mental health, books with titles like Reviving Ophelia and The Best Little Girl in ...

  8. Anorexia athletica - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anorexia_athletica

    Anorexia athletica is used to refer to "a disorder for athletes who engage in at least one unhealthy method of weight control". [2] Unlike anorexia nervosa, anorexia athletica does not have as much to do with body image as it does with performance. Athletes usually begin by eating more 'healthy' foods, as well as increasing their training.

  9. Maudsley family therapy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Maudsley_family_therapy

    A comparison of family to individual therapy was conducted with eighty anorexia patients. The study showed family therapy to be the more effective approach in patients under 18 and within 3 years of the onset of their illness. [1] Subsequent research confirmed the efficacy of family-based treatment for teens with anorexia nervosa.

  1. Related searches how does anorexia affect teenagers performance goals pdf book youtube videos

    anorexia and bulimia wikipediaanorexia nervosa recovery rate