You never go back to the way you were before. If a person with an eating problem starts to eat again they are more likely to gain more weight. That person will be depressed all the time and possible kill them self if they don't eat properly.
No. Primarily because dieting does not lead to eating disorders. Dieting, especially excessive dieting, is a symptom of eating disorders. The eating disorder, actually the mental/emotional dysfunction that leads to the disorder, leads to the dieting.
It depends on the specific eating disorder to identify specific mood or emotional symptoms. Most eating disorders, though, will involve drastic mood swings, depression, isolation, secrecy, and low-self esteem.
Depression, Suicidal thinking Eating disorders,
Eating disorders are often a result of someone eating out of stress or to alleviate emotional pain. A massage relaxes the entire body and promotes feeling of pleasure, much like eating good (fattening) food does!
Depression Suicidal thinking Eating disorders
Colleen A. Sundermeyer has written: 'Emotional weight' -- subject(s): Eating disorders
Because the issue is primarily psychological, with physical aspects typically being side effects of the psychological problem.
the study of eating disorders
Though many mental disorders can have physical side effects, and eating disorder is one of the only mental disorders that is also an actual physical disorder. Eating disorders often rob the body of essential nurtients (for disorders like bulimia and anorexia). Starvation and physical abuse (like laxatives, purging, and excessive exercise) can wreak havoc on the body. Other eating disorders contribute to poor butrition (binge eating, compulsive-over-eating, for example) and can lead to obesity-related health problems like diabetes.
Eating Disorders Association was created in 1989.
Eating Disorders Coalition was created in 2000.
eating disorders are a type a social issue and as you can tell with the title it effects a diet