Title: What You
1What Youll Learn
- 1. Discuss ways to determine desirable weight and
body composition.
2. Outline steps to follow for healthful weight
gain and weight loss. 3. Evaluate common
weight-loss strategies. 4. Discuss risks for
developing eating disorders.
2What Youll Learn
- 5. Discuss facts about anorexia nervosa and
bulimia.
6. Discuss binge eating disorder and obesity the
causes, symptoms, associated health problems, and
treatments.
3Key Terms
- body composition
- basal metabolic rate (BMR)
- caloric intake
- caloric expenditure
- overweight
- obesity
- eating disorder
- anorexia nervosa
- bulimia
4Weight and Body Composition
- Weight management is a diet and exercise plan to
maintain a desirable weight and body composition.
- Desirable weight is the weight that is healthful
for a person. - Body composition is the percentage of fat tissue
and lean tissue in the body.
5How to Determine Desirable Weight and Body
Composition
- The physician or dietitian will ask your age and
measure your height and current weight.
- The body frame is the approximate weight and
density of the bone structure. - The basal metabolic rate, or BMR, is the number
of calories the body uses at rest .
- A calorie is a unit of energy produced by food
and used by the body.
6How to Determine Desirable Weight and Body
Composition
- There are two kinds of body fat.
- Essential body fat is the amount of body fat
needed for optimal health. - Adipose tissue is fat that accumulates around
internal organs, within muscle, and under your
skin.
7How to Determine Desirable Weight and Body
Composition
- How to make a weight management planÂ
- A weight management plan is based on caloric
intake and caloric expenditure. - Caloric intake is the number of calories a
person takes in from foods and beverages.
- Caloric expenditure is the number of calories a
person uses for basal metabolic rate, digestion,
and physical activity.
8How to Determine Desirable Weight and Body
Composition
- When planning any type of goal setting, it is
best to create a health contract or some type of
plan. - Set a target date to evaluate your progress,
stating how the plan helped you accomplish your
health goal.
9How to Determine Desirable Weight and Body
Composition
- Making responsible decisions regarding your
caloric needs can help you reach your goal.
10Gaining Weight
- A body weight that is 10 percent or more below
desirable body weight is underweight.
- People who are underweight may be malnourished.
- Malnutrition is a condition in which the body
does not get the nutrients required for optimal
health.
11How to Gain Weight
- Teens who are underweight should have a physical
examination to determine the cause.
- They should work with a physician and/or a
dietitian to develop a healthful plan for weight
gain.
12How to Gain Weight
- How to Gain Weight Healthfully
- Increase food intake. Increase the number of
servings from each group in the Food Guide
Pyramid.
- Follow the Dietary Guidelines. Do not develop
harmful eating habits that are hard to break. - Watch eating habits and activity levels. Eat
snacks between meals and exercise to increase
muscle mass.
13Gaining Weight
- Overweight is a body weight that is 10 percent or
more than desirable body weight.
- Obesity is a body weight that is 20 percent or
more than desirable body weight.
14How to Lose Weight
- A physician can check for other causes of
overweight, such as an underactive thyroid gland.
- People who are overweight and obese are at risk
for developing cardiovascular diseases, diabetes,
and certain cancers.
15How to Lose Weight
- Steps to Lose Weight Healthfully
- Decrease food intake. Select low calorie foods
and beverages from each food group.
- Follow the Dietary Guidelines. Be especially
careful to choose low-fat and fat-free foods that
are also low-calorie. - Stay active. Participate in regular physical
activity that increases BMR. - Keep a journal. Keep a journal of food and
beverage intake and weight loss.
16Weight Loss Strategies
- Developing healthful eating habits is one way to
lose weight gradually.
- Some people try other strategies for losing
weight.
17What to Know About Weight-Loss Strategies
- A liquid diet is a diet in which beverages are
substituted for some or all meals. - While on a liquid diet, a person should have
medical supervision with blood tests at set
intervals. - Liquid diets sold in supermarkets and drugstores
that do not require medical supervision can be
dangerous.
18What to Know About Weight-Loss Strategies
- A fad diet is a quick weight-loss strategy that
is popular for a short time. - Some people try so many different diets that they
never develop healthful eating habits. - Some fad diets are dangerous.
19What to Know About Weight-Loss Strategies
- The Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has
approved prescription drugs for the treatment
of obesity. - An anorectic drug is a drug that decreases
appetite and, in some cases, increases serotonin
levels in the brain. - Serotonin is a chemical in the body that helps
regulate primitive drives and emotions.
20What to Know About Weight-Loss Strategies
- A starvation diet is a dangerous method of weight
loss in which a person severely restricts
calories resulting in a shortage of blood
glucose. - The body relies on stored fat for energy and
releases a high amount of fat into the blood. - Fat ketosis is a condition in which excessive
ketones are released into the blood.
21What to Know About Weight-Loss Strategies
- Over-the-counter diet pills
- Some diet pills can be purchased without a
prescription. - Diet pills can be dangerous, addictive, and
ineffective. - Teens who use diet pills often do not get a
balanced diet and may suffer from malnutrition.
22What to Know About Weight-Loss Strategies
- A laxative is a drug that helps a person have a
bowel movement. - A diuretic is a product that increases the amount
of urine excreted. - The use of laxatives or diuretics provides
temporary weight loss because it is only fluid
loss. - Fluid loss can be dangerous.
23Eating Disorders
- An eating disorder is a condition in which a
person has a compelling need to starve, to binge,
or to binge and purge.
- To binge is to eat large amounts of food over a
short period of time. - To purge is to rid the body of food by vomiting
or by using laxatives and diuretics. - Eating disorders are addictions.
24Why Some Teens Are at Risk for Developing Eating
Disorders
- Body image is the perception a person has of his
or her bodys appearance.
- Teens who have a positive body image look in the
mirror and like what they see, while teens who
have a negative body image look in the mirror and
are dissatisfied. - Some teens develop a distorted body image and
think they are fat when they are not.
25Why Some Teens Are at Risk for Developing Eating
Disorders
- Uncomfortable with secondary sex characteristics
- During puberty, the secondary sex characteristics
develop. - Some teens have difficulty when these changes
occur and may choose harmful ways to cope with
their feelings, such as starving, bingeing, or
purging.
26Why Some Teens Are at Risk for Developing Eating
Disorders
- Perfectionism a compelling need to be flawless.
- Perfectionism is the result of feeling inadequate
and insecure. - When teens who are perfectionists begin a diet,
they may develop an eating disorder.
27Why Some Teens Are at Risk for Developing Eating
Disorders
- Some teens feel compelled to control every
situation. - As a result, they diet or exercise to extremes as
a way to show control.
28Why Some Teens Are at Risk for Developing Eating
Disorders
- Some teens are not able to express their emotions
and substitute other behaviors for the
healthful expression of these emotions.
29Why Some Teens Are at Risk for Developing Eating
Disorders
Behaviors of an Eating Disorder The following
behaviors may indicate that you are at risk for
developing an eating disorder
- I constantly compare myself to others.
- I am unhappy with my physical appearance.
- I wear baggy clothes to hide my body changes
(females).
- I felt unsafe during my childhood (from
alcoholism, physical abuse, or sexual abuse in
the family). - I only feel secure when I can feel that I am in
control of a situation.
30Why Some Teens Are at Risk for Developing Eating
Disorders
Behaviors of an Eating Disorder The following
behaviors may indicate that you are at risk for
developing an eating disorder
I think it is disgusting to have menstrual
periods. (females)
- I do not know what to do when I feel lonely,
frustrated, rejected, or depressed. - I reach for food, starve, exercise, or rid myself
of food when I am uncomfortable.
- I am never satisfied with anything I do.
- My parent or guardian is never satisfied with
anything I do.
31Anorexia Nervosa
- Anorexia nervosa is an eating disorder in which a
person starves himself or herself and weighs 15
percent or more below desirable weight.
- Anorexia nervosa, which usually is referred to as
anorexia, is life-threatening.
32What to Know About Anorexia
- Obsessed with being thinÂ
- People with anorexia do not recognize when they
are dangerously thin. - The disease can affect males and females, teens
and adults. - Many people with anorexia, especially teens, are
obsessed with exercise and abuse laxatives,
enemas, and diuretics.
33What to Know About Anorexia
- Teens with anorexia often are good students and
are obedient and respectful. - They often set very high expectations for
themselves and feel inadequate if these
expectations are not met. - To try to gain back control, they starve
themselves.
34What to Know About Anorexia
- Treatment for anorexia nervosa
- Treatment for anorexia involves a team of
professionalsphysicians, nurses, dietitians, and
mental-health professionals. - A treatment plan is developed that deals with
physical, mental, and emotional health problems.
35What to Know About Anorexia
How Anorexia Nervosa Harms Health Teens with
anorexia may have
- dehydration and constipation,
- abdominal pain and nausea,
- hormonal changes,
- damage to body organs,
- decrease in heart rate and blood pressure,
- impaired immune system function,
- absence of menstruation in females,
- hair loss and malnutrition,
- negative self-confidence,
- a lack of self-respect,
- depression and an urge to withdraw.
36Bulimia
- Bulimia is an eating disorder in which a person
binges and purges.
- Bingeing and purging involves eating large
amounts of food in a short period of time, then
ridding the body of the foods. - Teens with bulimia may vomit or use laxatives or
diuretics to purge.
37What to Know About Bulimia
- Bulimia is far more common than anorexia
nervosa.
- People with bulimia are obsessed with their body
shape and size.
- Teens who have a negative body image are at risk
for bulimia. - These teens often are insecure and depressed.
38What to Know About Bulimia
- Behaviors of teens with bulimiaÂ
- Unlike teens with anorexia, teens with bulimia
usually know they have a problem. - They feel guilty and ashamed, but are unable to
change their behavior. - Many teens try to conceal their bulimic behavior.
39What to Know About Bulimia
- How bulimia harms healthÂ
- Teens with bulimia may have dissolved tooth
enamel, tooth decay, sore gums, enlarged salivary
glands, and swollen cheeks. - Bulimia may cause damage to the colon, heart, and
kidneys.
- Treatment for bulimia involves a team of
professionals who deal with physical and
emotional health problems.
40What to Know About Bulimia
Signs of Bulimia in Teens Teens with bulimia may
- binge in private, but eat regular amounts when
with others, - have one secret place in which to binge,
- steal food or hide it in a secret place,
- think about food constantly and plan each binge
carefully,
- buy or steal special treats or meals for a
binge, - gulp food quickly while bingeing so as not to be
discovered, - steal money to purchase food, or steal from
stores - exercise and diet excessively between binges.
41Binge Eating and Obesity
- Binge eating disorder is an eating disorder in
which a person cannot control eating and eats
excessive amounts.
- Between 2 and 5 percent of Americans experience
binge eating disorder in a six-month period.
42What to Know About Binge Eating Disorder and
Obesity
- Binge eating disorder is more common in females.
- Teens with this disorder turn to food as a
substitute for coping and, after time, become
addicted to food. - Teens with binge eating disorder need medical and
psychological help.
43What to Know About Binge Eating Disorder and
Obesity
- How binge eating disorder and obesity harm
healthÂ
- There are many physical problems associated with
binge eating disorder and obesity. - They include an increased risk of developing
cardiovascular diseases, high blood pressure,
diabetes, and certain types of cancer. - Teens with binge eating disorder may have
negative self-esteem, a negative body image and
frequent bouts of depression.
44What to Know About Binge Eating Disorder and
Obesity
- Treatment for binge eating disorder and obesity
- Treatment for binge eating disorder and obesity
involves a team of health-care professionals who
deal with physical and emotional problems. - After weight loss, patients must learn new eating
habits. - Therapy, nutrition classes, and support groups
are helpful.
45Anorexia v. Bulimia Whats the Difference?
Teens with bulimia
Teens with anorexia
Are often females Are often females age 14 to
18. age 15 to 24. Are very thin. May have normal
weight. Deny their behavior. Are aware of their
behavior and feel guilty, but cannot
change. Deny they are hungry. Recognize they
are hungry and want to eat.
46Anorexia v. Bulimia Whats the Difference?
Teens with bulimia
Teens with anorexia
Withdraw from others. May be outgoing and social.
Females do not have Females may have menstrual
periods. irregular periods. Resist treatment. Are
more likely to get help when they are
confronted with their behavior.
47Study Guide
- 1. Match the following terms and definitions.
___ adipose tissue ___ serotonin ___
malnutrition ___ basal metabolic rate ___
diuretic
A. a condition in which the body does not get
the nutrients required for optimal health B. a
product that increases the amount of urine
excreted C. the number of calories the body uses
at rest D. a chemical in the body that helps
regulate drives and emotions E. fat that
accumulates around internal organs, within
muscle, and under your skin
E D A C B
48Study Guide
- 2. Identify the following statements as true or
false. - _______ Obesity is a body weight that is 10
percent more than desirable body weight. - _______ Bulimia is an eating disorder in which
a person cannot control eating and
eats excessive amounts - _______ People with anorexia do not recognize
when they are dangerously thin - _______ To lose weight, your caloric intake
must be less than your caloric expenditure
false false true true
49Study Guide
- 3. Identify four reasons why some teens develop
eating disorders.
Reasons some teens develop eating disorders
include a negative or distorted body image, a
compelling need to be flawless or perfect, and a
need to show control. Some teens develop eating
disorders because they are unable to express
emotions or because they are uncomfortable with
the development of secondary sex characteristics.
50End of the Lesson