Eating disorders Eating disorders are a way of using food to solve emotional problems. These diseases develop due to emotional and / or psychological problems. Eating disorders are how some people deal with stress. In today's society, young people are obliged to think that weight loss and happiness are one thing. Chemical balance in the brain can also lead to depression, obsessive-compulsive disorder and bipolar disease, and can also lead to several eating disorders. Other reasons include emotional events, illness, marriage and family problems, manic depression, or the end of relationships.
Puberty Eating Disorder Puberty Eating Disorder Introduction Adolescent eating disorders are a cause of serious alarms. An effective definition of an eating disorder represents the victim of eating disorders, as is evident in the school environment. Because eating disorders have wide anxiety and perception about food, weight, and body shape. This led to strange feeding behavior (Gowers & Bryant-Waugh, 2004). This article is intended to investigate the effects of eating disorders in adolescence.
Eating disorders are complicated diseases that affect people of all ages and the onset of eating disorders usually occurs before adolescence or puberty. In the United States alone, eating disorders affect millions of young people and young people. Given the fact that eating disorders can cause serious complications, identification, diagnosis and treatment must be identified as soon as possible. It can be recovered through early diagnosis and appropriate treatment. There is a correlation between the "ideal" body and the concept of eating disorders, but there is no consensus on the underlying causes of eating disorders. Eating disorders are generally thought to be caused by one or more physical, behavioral, and social factors including genetics, unpleasant experiences / injuries, pressure from peers, teasing, families with eating disorders, etc. It is.
This article describes neglect of eating disorder NOS DSM-IV diagnosis. The two misunderstandings seem to maintain an eating disorder NOS at the end of eating disorders. The first is to assume that cases of dysregulated NOS are mild and therefore not important. The above review shows that this view is wrong. The second misunderstanding is that the eating disorder NOS is not common. Data from an eating disorder clinic lies about this view (see Table 1), but it may persist because of the "residual" situation of NOS diagnosis.
Eating disorder NOS (EDNOS): An example of annoying "unspecified" (NOS) category in DSM-IV
Between eating disorders and eating disorders these two are often misunderstood and out of context. Confused meals are almost the same as eating disorders, but there are some differences. A person who is having a confused meal refers to a person who is undergoing the actual diagnosis of an eating disorder, but who is doing the same thing as a person who is often sick. One example of this is cleaning after eating too much. People who eat disorders often