- An inability to maintain a healthy or minimum body weight
- A distorted body image
- An intense fear of gaining weight or becoming overweight
- An excessive emphasis on weight
- The denial of the seriousness of their condition
- In females an additional characteristic is the cessation of the menstrual cycle.
Risk Factors
- Having a history of dieting (diets do not cause, instead all eating disorders originate through dieting attempts
- Being female (95% of diagnoses are in females)
- Having a parent in the family system who is overly concerned with weight issues
- Being a prepubscent or adolescent female (due to the incongruence of actual and ideal female body types portrayed in cultural situations)
- Biological predispostion.
- Psychological characteristics: distorted thinking, low self-esteem, stress, anxiety, perfectionism, and fear of rejection
- A history of trauma, sexual or physcial abuse
- Socio-cultural factors such as media or peer influences.
- Psychological characteristics: high self-esteem, internal locus of control, high self-efficacy, mature defense mechanisms and coping strategies
- Personality characteristics: easy temperment, ability to make and maintain friendships, optimism
- Secure attachment to a parent
- Good parental adjustment. Parents with healthy attitudes towards weight and food can pass these along to children
- Socio-cultural factors: low levels of stress, high levels of support, minimal exposure to media images.
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