Find » Health & Wellness » Diseases & Conditions » Does Your Daughter Have an Eating D...

Does Your Daughter Have an Eating Disorder?

By Lea Barton, published Apr 15, 2007
Published Content: 138  Total Views: 152,917  Favorited By: 21 CPs
Embed:  
Rating: 4.5 of 5
Knowing how to tell whether your daughter has an eating disorder is a very difficult process. Teenagers and college-age women go through so many changes, but these are the years when teen girls and women are most vulnerable in terms of eating disorders. In addition, because eating disorder behavior is very secretive by nature, a daughter who develop bulimia or anorexia or binge eating are less likely to discuss these behaviors. Keeping an eating disorder a secret is a crucial part of the disease for any daughter with a food disorder.

Look for the following behaviors in your daughterwhen suspicions develop about a diet disorder:

1. Does the daughter complain she's fat? Does she discuss her body constantly, complain about food being a temptation, or complain about regular eating patterns in the family? It is common for a daughter who develops eating disorders to stop eating traditional comfort items, to complain to parents and ask them to stop cooking high-calorie foods, or to constantly complain that they are "fat" even when the woman looks to be of normal or nearly-normal body weight.

2. Has the daughter's food pattern changed? Does she refuse to eat meals, eat smaller portions, or eat only one low-calorie food, like lettuce only? Look at overall food pattern changes as a symptom of bulimia, anorexia, or binges.

3. Has the daughter lost weight? Even five or ten pounds is significant if it's combined with the other symptoms on this list. More than an average of one pound per week is significant as well. If you send a daughter off to college in September and she returns home for Thanksgiving weighing thirty pounds less, alarm bells regarding a food disorder should be going off in your head.

4. Does she exercise excessively? When she eats, does she talk about "needing" to exercise afterwards? Excessive exercise can be a form of an eating disorder. If a woman eats 1000 calories per day but believes she "needs" to exercise for six hours to control her weight, intervention may be necessary.

Does Your Daughter Have an Eating Disorder?

Women with eating disorders live by the scale--and sometimes, they die by the scale.

Credit: Peter Werner

Copyright: Peter Werner

Comments
Comments 1 - 5 of 5
 
 
I'm not a mother, in fact i'm a kid, but i'm worried about my friend and if she might have an eating disorder. this is helpful, but i'm still worried. she's the type of person who is very quiet and shy, and has low self-esteem. she brings very, very small portions of healthy food to lunch, and when we offer her more food, she turns it down 99% of the time. the only time she ate something i asked her to was after i assured her it wasn't unhealthy. (it was a fruit snack.) she didn't eat lunch the other day, claiming that she couldn't eat after she saw someone throw up (another girl got sick in the hall 2 and a half hours before, poor thing.) i'm worried, can someone help me?

Posted on 10/08/2007 at 3:10:00 PM

 
good article. I'm so relieved that my 3 daughters don't show any of these signs. I do have one daughter though who suddenly decided to become vegan but I think it's more a fad for her because her whole group is doing it. I'm not too worried though because she's trying to eat healthier rather than obsessing on not eating or eating poorly.

Posted on 05/30/2007 at 1:05:00 PM

 
Eating disorders can be a very hard to treat and serious disorder. As a mental health therapist, I have seen the incease in teenage girls and even boys who suffer from eating disorders. This is a very good article that will really help alot of people.

Posted on 05/28/2007 at 4:05:00 PM

 
Good summary of the key signs. What's more difficult, it seems, is what to do when you suspect something's wrong.

Posted on 05/28/2007 at 12:05:00 PM

 
I have six kids, four of which are teenage daughters, and although I try my very best to know what they are doing, I cant watch them 24/7. I dealt with this with my oldest daughter, and at first felt as though it was my fault for not noticing, fortunately I found out in time and we took care of the problem. This is a growing problem that too many young girls are facing.. I sure hope it gets better in the future.. Great article !!!

Posted on 05/07/2007 at 4:05:00 PM

Type in Your Comments Below - (1000 characters left)
Your name:

Submit your own content on this or any topic. Get started »
Comments 1 - 5 of 5
 
Advertisment