Binge Eating – Self Diagnosis and Help
Although it is always recommended to seek advice and treatment from a health professional if you believe you have an eating disorder, the following information may help you to determine whether or not you have an eating problem.
Although binge eating has existed for a number of years the illness is a relatively newly recognised disorder and is often referred to as compulsive eating. This disorder affects millions of people across the world. It has some similarities with bulimia nervosa where the sufferer consumes huge amounts of food in a small space of time due to a lack of control.
Following this the sufferer will purge/vomit, undertake large amounts of exercise or abuse laxatives to compensate for the amount of food they have consumed. However, binge eaters do not undertake the compensatory activities following a binge although they still have the same feelings of self disgust and guilt.
Diagnosing Binge Eating via Characteristics
There are a number of classic characteristic although like any other illness, each individual case is slightly unique. However, here are examples of the most common symptoms:
- A lack of control during an episode of binge eating. The sufferer often feels as though they cannot stop eating.
- Eating large amounts of food until the patient feels uncomfortable or even sick.
- Eating larger than normal amounts of food during a small space of time, usually within a period of two hours.
Sufferers find that episodes of binge eating are associated with three or more of the following factors:
Eating food more rapidly than normal
Eating larger amounts of food even when not physically hungry
Feelings of depression, guilt or disgust following an overeating episode.
Feelings of embarrassment when eating so eating alone so ensure the amount of food consumed is secret.
Feelings of distress regarding binge eating
Occurrence of binge eating for at least 2 days of a week over a period of at least six months.
Binge eating is not associated with other inappropriate compensatory behaviour such as vomiting or excessive exercise such as that present in bulimia nervosa.
Warning signs to look out for:
anxious moods/depression
sufferer avoiding any social events which involve food
consumes food to the point of discomfort or even pain
consuming large amounts of food when not physically hungry
eating late at night
eating secretly alone and/or hiding food
a feeling of no control during a binging episode – inability to stop
eating faster than normal / rapidly without chewing food before swallowing
hiding/hoarding high calorie junk food
constant weight fluctuations / rapid weight gain, often obesity
shame, guilt ad disgust following an episode of binging
using eating to cope with stress, unhappiness or other psychological/emotional feelings
eating very large / abnormal portions of food over a short period of time
associates food with one’s failures and successes
does not use compensatory methods following binging episodes such as vomiting, excessive exercise or abuse of laxatives.