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Archive for Eating Disorders

Orthorexia: Where Eating Disorders Meet OCD – Part 2

Monday, January 9th, 2012 Orthorexia 6 Comments

    

Effective Strategies and Predictable Complications in the Treatment of Orthorexia

In our previous article about Orthorexia, we described this relatively unknown and misunderstood condition.  In this, the second and final installment in this series, we discuss strategies and pitfalls in the treatment of Orthorexia.

ORTHOREXIA 2

Orthorexia can be effectively treated with Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT) and Mindfulness

Orthorexia, being a somewhat new conceptualization of a psychological disorder, is under-researched and often misunderstood within the mental health and medical communities.  Many mental health professionals have found success treating individuals with Orthorexia using evidence-based treatment methods that are used to treat other Eating Disorders, OCD, and related OC Spectrum Disorders.

Cognitive-Behavioral Therapy (CBT) and Mindfulness are two highly effective treatment methods used to treat Orthorexia.  Using CBT, individuals with Orthorexia learn to challenge and change their distorted thoughts (cognitions) related to their body and the foods they eat.  Education about nutrition and what is considered “healthy” should also be integrated into CBT when treating Orthorexia, using logical, evidence-based strategies. › Continue reading

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Orthorexia: Where Eating Disorders Meet OCD


    

Orthorexia – The Not-So-Healthy Obsession with “Healthy” Eating

Individuals with Orthorexia exhibit symptoms similar to OCD and Eating Disorders.

Individuals suffering with Orthorexia exhibit symptoms similar to those of OCD and Eating Disorders.

Orthorexia Nervosa (also simply known as Orthorexia) is a relatively new term within the psychological and medical fields. Simply defined, Orthorexia is an eating disorder in which an individual has an excessive and ultimately unhealthy obsession about maintaining a diet that is totally “healthy” and “pure”. Because of their extremely restrictive eating, individuals with Orthorexia are often severely underweight, and frequently lack the proper nourishment to perform basic daily activities. Like most cases involving an eating disorder, the outcome of Orthorexia can be severe malnutrition and a significant reduction of one’s quality of life.

Orthorexia has not yet been accepted as a formal diagnosis by the psychiatric community, and has not been defined within the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual (DSM-IV). However, since first being described by Dr. Steven Bratman in 1996, many health professionals have observed the often debilitating results of this condition. › Continue reading

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Binge Eating Disorder / Compulsive Overeating and Its Treatment


    

Binge Eating / Compulsive Overeating is a real problem and can be successfully treated

Binge Eating / Compulsive Overeating is a real problem that can be successfully treated

Binge Eating Disorder, also known as ‘”compulsive overeating”, can perhaps best be described as a condition in which one periodically consumes extremely large amounts of food.   Individuals with Binge Eating Disorder have a strong motivational drive for food and experience great difficulty in their attempts to restrain their eating.   They frequently continue eating well beyond their satiation level, with many reporting that their behavior feels “unconscious”, and that they have little control over it.  It appears that compulsive overeating is often done in response to emotional difficulties or psychosocial stressors.  Unfortunately, during and after a binge, one is often left feeling more depressed, anxious and helpless than they did before they overate.

In addition to the psychological issues noted above, some researchers and theoreticians believe that compulsive overeating has played a significant role in the dramatic increase in obesity levels in the Untied States over the past 30 years.  Obesity is commonly identified as having a body-mass index (BMI) over 30.  Using this guideline, approximately 34% of Americans are currently classified as obese, compared to 15% in 1980.  During this same 30 year period, this increase in obesity has led to a concomitant surge in diabetes and hypertension, both of which are risk-factors for heart disease, the number one cause of death in the US. › Continue reading

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