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PandorasBox
Martini, anyone?

QUOTE
"Drunkorexia": A New Eating Disorder?
Reporting
Suzanne Le Mignot (CBS) Young women face a lot of pressure to be thin and to be popular among peers. Mix the two stresses and experts say they're seeing destructive behavior that every parent needs to know about.

Could your daughter be wining, but not dining at all? Suzanne Le Mignot reports on a phenomenon called "drunkorexia."

It might sound harmless; exchange a meal for a martini or two every once in a while. But experts say for many young women, it's a dangerous habit.

"There's a tremendous weight consciousness out there. At the same time, you have people drinking and sort of encouraged to drink," said Dr. Douglas Bunnell an eating disorder specialist. He said more and more young women are giving up food calories for alcohol.

Although it's not an actual medical condition, some have called it drunkorexia, a comparison to anorexia.

"With extreme drunkorexia we end up with people so badly nourished that their ability to function cognitively and emotionally is impaired," Bunnell said.

Lynn Grefe, CEO of the National Eating Disorders Association, said "The drunkorexic is really adding on to the problem of anorexia and they truly need counseling before the problem goes too far."

"Piper" is a 21-year-old student. She's had food issues for years and says things got much worse when she went away to college.

"I think it was just there was more social interaction with other people and we were going out more so I had to watch what I was eating when I was going out," she said.

While some young women are diagnosed anorexics, many others went to school as healthy eaters but started panicking about those extra college pounds.

"Beer was like 'you don't drink beer unless, like, you haven't eaten all day.' You know, sometimes people, they'll replace some of their drinks with things they think are more nutritious like Bloody Mary's because it has tomato juice in it. They think that that can replace a meal," Piper said.

So how do you know if you have a problem?

"If you are doing mental algebra to compensate or manage your drinking in response to your eating, simply that sign is worrisome," Bunnell said.

"I would recommend that everybody encourage people to go for treatment. There's nothing to be ashamed of," Grefe said.

Piper did just that. She's also changed schools and with help from her family and counselors, she's on her way back to a healthy weight and outlook.
Ithlilian
laugh.gif

Is that for real. Whoever named it drunkorexia must have thought it a joke. I refuse to take anything seriously with such a stupid name.

Alcohol is fattening I don't know how they are losing weight.
CleverNameGoesHere
OH, I forgot all about this, but I heard Eliot talking about it on DC101 several weeks back. Yes, it's apparently quite popular on college campuses, cute girls who like to drink but are terrified of gaining weight from it. Pretty f'ed up IMHO. We all know you're gonna gain weight anyway at some point, don't jeoparize your health because of it...just accept that Freshman 15 (or 20 or whatever binge-drinking does to an 18-year-old girl nowadays)
PandorasBox
QUOTE (Ithlilian @ Jun 13 2008, 07:05 PM) *
laugh.gif

Is that for real. Whoever named it drunkorexia must have thought it a joke. I refuse to take anything seriously with such a stupid name.

Alcohol is fattening I don't know how they are losing weight.


Yeah, but if alcohol is the only thing you are consuming... Binge & purge, binge & purge...

laugh.gif laugh.gif laugh.gif
Udmas
Binge & purge

or


Get drunk & Puke

laugh.gif
Ithlilian
True
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