E.D. & Drug Abuse Test
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| A. Since the 1980's it has tripled in boys age 7-13. Girls are more obese, though. It doubled for girls.B. As early as 7-10 years oldC. "Drive for thinness" - brings about weight preoccupationD. The hope of changing appearance. When you begin dieting, you will lose weight immediatelyE. Focused on decreasing inactivity and increasing proper nutritional and exercise habits. Restricting diet is actually NOT recommended.F. Similarities between obese and ED: Social implications- suffer teasing and bullying at school. Also parents have bad eating attitudes in both cases.G. 5 times likelier to have an impaired quality of life in obese childrenH. Heritability, lifestyle choices imposed by parents. Psych factors in the home: lack of support, mistreatment by parents, lack of communicationI. Risks for obese children: heart and cholesterol problems, fatal in 10% of cases, later emergence of eating disordersJ. No correlation for babies to childhood. Childhood-onset obesity does usually lead to obesity in teens and adulthood.K. No, picky eating is not a risk factor for developing eating disorders.L. Yes, SES is a factor. Junk food at low costs, limited physical activity because it's unsafe to go outside and play |
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