Iconocast Logo

Welcome To Iconocast

How to add a URL link from your web site to the Iconocast web sites

Virtual tour of Southern California



 

Recent News and Articles on the Keywords: eating + disorders + web  Related to the article below (Last Update: 8/4/2008)

History of violence surfaces for man charged in murder; In 2003 ...
Cape Coral Daily Breeze, FL -
Five percent to 10 percent of those suffering from major depressive disorder later develop bipolar disorder, the Web site states. ...
Take control of binging
The Saratogian, NY -
Some bingers may be diagnosed as having BED, Binge-Eating Disorder. To recover from or to reduce your binges, you need a lot of patience and introspection. ...
Health Happenings
Fort Worth Star Telegram, TX -
nOvereaters Anonymous, a 12-step group for those with eating disorders, meets at 7:30 pm Monday and Thursday and 9 am Saturday at South Hills Christian ...
Independent.co.uk Web
Independent, UK - Jul 14, 2008
Eating disorders are a huge problem in the UK that affect 1.1 million people, according to the charity Beating Eating Disorders (beat), but lots of people ...
Independent.co.uk Web
Independent, UK - Jul 15, 2008
I started on a general paediatric ward because there wasn?ta bed in the eating disorders unit. When I did get into the eating disorder unit, I?d never met ...
HealthMedia Launches First-Ever Binge Eating Campaign and ...
MarketWatch - Jul 21, 2008
This revolutionary new program is the first solution of its kind that addresses America's top eating disorder and its growing impact on healthcare costs and ...TPO:5468 - OTC:CMTX
AD INFERNA: New Songs Available For Streaming - Aug. 4, 2008
Blabbermouth.net, NY -
French metal/gothic band AD INFERNA, which features SETH mainman/vocalist Arkames, has posted two new tracks on its official web site. ...

TheMedGuru
A 33-stone British Teenager Hopes a US Fat Camp Will Save Her Life
TheMedGuru, India - Aug 3, 2008
Like anorexia and binge eating, comfort eating is also a leading psychological problem effecting children. Eating in response to emotions, particularly if ...
Mercy Ministries has high success rate
The Tennessean, TN - Aug 1, 2008
By BOB SMIETANA ? Staff Writer ? August 1, 2008 An eating disorder had taken over her life, and sexual abuse from her childhood was haunting her, ...
On the Shelf book review
Emporia Gazette, KS - Aug 2, 2008
Jennifer Sey in the introduction ?Chalked Up: Inside Elite Gymnastics? Merciless Coaching, Overzealous Parents, Eating Disorders, and Elusive Olympic ...
Source: Google News

The Body Politic: Normal Female Adolescent Development and the Development of Eating Disorders -
C Steiner-Adair - Journal of the American Academy of Psychoanalysis, 1986 - PEP Web
... have motivated people to fast throughout time, it appears that eating disorders,
which affect ... printed for the personal use of the subscriber to PEP Web and is ...

A prospective study of outcome in bulimia nervosa and the long-term effects of three psychological … -
CG Fairburn, PA Norman, SL Welch, ME O'Connor, HA … - Archives of General Psychiatry, 1995 - Am Med Assoc
... message because your Web browser does not support basic Web standards. ... Symptom
Fluctuation in Eating Disorders: Correlates of Diagnostic Crossover Tozzi et al. ...

Eating Disorders: Progress and Problems -
BT Walsh, MJ Devlin - Science, 1998 - sciencemag.org
... style/presentation instructions -- or possibly that you are using a browser that
does not support current Web standards ... Eating Disorders: Progress and Problems. ...

Family and individual therapy in anorexia nervosa. A 5-year follow-up -
I Eisler, C Dare, GF Russell, G Szmukler, D le … - Archives of General Psychiatry, 1997 - archpsyc.highwire.org
... because your Web browser does not support basic Web standards. ... evidence that specific
psychological treatments are effective in patients with eating disorders. ...
-

Is puberty a risk factor for eating disorders? -
JD Killen, C Hayward, I Litt, LD Hammer, DM Wilson … - Archives of Pediatrics and Adolescent Medicine, 1992 - Am Med Assoc
You are seeing this message because your Web browser does not support basic
Web standards. ... Is puberty a risk factor for eating disorders? ...

Self Psychological Reflections on the Origins of Eating Disorders -
RA Geist - Journal of the American Academy of Psychoanalysis, 1989 - PEP Web
... text is printed for the personal use of the subscriber to PEP Web and is ... Women with
future eating disorders, while appearing to function in a similar manner to ...

… troubles in young people: prevalence estimates of selected psychiatric disorders in a nonreferred … -
A Whitaker, J Johnson, D Shaffer, JL Rapoport, K … - Archives of General Psychiatry, 1990 - Am Med Assoc
... this message because your Web browser does not support basic Web standards. ... first
stage included items based on DSM-III criteria for eating disorders and panic ...

… on weight-control experience, eating disorder and nutrient intake of college students attending web
JH Lee, JS Kim, MY Lee, SH Chung, KJ Chang - Korean J Comm Nutr, 2001 - koreamed.org
... Korean. Click here to read A Study on Weight-Control Experience, Eating Disorder
and Nutrient Intake of College Students Attending Web Class via the Internet. ...

Media Images, Body Dissatisfaction, and Disordered Eating in Adolescent Women. -
LC Andrist, W RNC - MCN: The American Journal of Maternal Child Nursing, 2003 - mcnjournal.com
... vulnerable youths-teens with low self-esteem; teens with distorted body images;
and teens just trying to recover from eating disorders. These Web sites are ...

The Image and Uses of the Body in Psychic Conflict?With Special Reference to Eating Disorders in … -
S Ritvo - Psychoanalytic Study of the Child, 1984 - PEP Web
... of hysterical and obsessional symptoms, many of which, like the eating disorders,
became apparent only ... for the personal use of the subscriber to PEP Web and is ...

Source: Google Scholar
 
 

Underweight Women More Likely to Miscarry

December 4, 2006 03:56:10 PM PST

MONDAY, Dec. 4 (HealthDay News) -- Women who are underweight before they become pregnant are 72 percent more likely to suffer a miscarriage in the first three months of pregnancy, according to a study from the London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine.

The study of more than 6,600 women, aged 18-55, also found that underweight women can significantly reduce their risk of miscarriage in the first trimester by about 50 percent by taking supplements with folate or iron and by eating fresh fruits and vegetables every day.

Chocolate was also associated with reduced risk of miscarriage in this group of women.

The study is published in the current online edition of BJOG: An International Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology.

Among the study's other findings:

Article continues below and (thank you)

 

 

  • Women who weren't married or living with a partner had an increased risk of miscarriage.
  • Women who had changed partners (for example, after having been pregnant before by a previous partner) had a 60 percent increased risk.
  • Previous pregnancy termination increased the risk of subsequent miscarriage by 60 percent.
  • Fertility problems were associated with a 41 percent increased risk.
  • All types of assisted reproduction were associated with increased risk, particularly intrauterine insemination or artificial insemination.
  • Women who said their pregnancies were "planned" had a 40 percent reduced risk of miscarriage.
  • Women who had nausea and sickness in the first 12 weeks of pregnancy had about a 70 percent reduced risk.

"Our study confirms the findings of previous studies which suggest that following a healthy diet, reducing stress and looking after your emotional well-being may all play a role in helping women in early pregnancy, or planning a pregnancy, to reduce their risk of miscarriage," study author Noreen Maconochie, a senior lecturer in epidemiology and medical statistics, said in a prepared statement.

"The findings related to low pre-pregnancy weight, previous termination, stress and change of partner are noteworthy, and we suggest further work be initiated to confirm these findings in other study populations," Maconochie said.

More information

The American Pregnancy Association has more about pregnancy loss.

 

Teen Use of Eating Disorders Web Sites on the Rise

December 4, 2006 03:56:10 PM PST
By Serena Gordon
HealthDay Reporter

MONDAY, Dec. 4 (HealthDay News) -- Teens with eating disorders often turn to the Web -- sometimes for help with their problem but also for new suggestions on ways to lose weight.

Parents, however, seem largely unaware that their children are using the Internet to visit eating disorder Web sites.

Those are two conclusions from a new study in the December issue of Pediatrics that also found that teens who look for eating disorder information on the Internet are more likely to be hospitalized for their condition than teens who don't turn to the Web.

"People have always picked up and shared dangerous information," said one of the study's authors, Dr. Rebecka Peebles, an instructor of adolescent medicine at Lucile Packard Children's Hospital at Stanford University School of Medicine. "The Internet gives instant access to new and potentially dangerous information kids may not have encountered on their own."

Peebles said this study's findings highlight the need for parents to educate themselves about how to use the Internet and to talk to their children about what they're viewing online.

The Internet, e-mail and instant messaging are popular forms of communication for teens. Children between the ages of 13 and 19 are the group most likely to use the computer, according to background information in the study. Additionally, as many as two-thirds of teenage girls look for health information on the Web.

Some sites provide reliable information. But teens may also stumble across sites with harmful messages. These sites may be run as community forums or chat sites, where teens with eating disorders can exchange ideas and information to reinforce their harmful activities.

For the new study, Peebles, her student Jenny Wilson, and colleagues sent questionnaires regarding Internet use and eating disorder information to the parents of nearly 700 people who had been evaluated for an eating disorder at Lucile Packard Children's Hospital between 1997 and 2004.

One hundred and eighty-two people responded to the survey -- 76 teens and 106 parents.

The good news was that nearly half of all the teens hadn't visited an eating disorder Web site. The bad news was that 41 percent had visited a pro-eating disorder Web site, while 36 percent had visited a pro-recovery Web site. Twenty-five percent had been to both types of sites.

Ninety-six percent of the teens who went to pro-eating disorder sites reported gleaning new weight-loss or purging information from the sites. More alarmingly, 46 percent of those who went to a pro-recovery Web site said they had gained new information about different weight-loss techniques.

About 53 percent of parents knew there were pro-eating disorder Web sites, but just about as many parents thought their children weren't visiting these sites. Only 28 percent had brought up the subject of eating disorder Web sites with their teen. Almost two-thirds of parents were unaware that there were pro-recovery Web sites on the Internet.

Users of pro-eating disorder Web sites were significantly more likely to have required hospitalization than teens who didn't frequent those sites -- 3.9 percent versus 1.1 percent, respectively.

"Kids are using these sites and getting information from them. Parents should be discussing what kind of information they're learning, and it's important for parents to see if the information is accurate," Peebles said.

Dr. Alexander Sackeyfio, an eating disorder specialist at Beaumont Hospital in Royal Oak, Mich., said, "This is something that all of us who treat eating disorders struggle with. We want to present information in a way that we hope will inform, but not in a way that might encourage someone to make their symptoms even worse."

But, he added, he doesn't think either type of Web site generates these destructive behaviors in the first place. He pointed out that there is a lot of health misinformation on the Internet and that most people don't follow ill-advised advice they see on the Web.

"But, there are always sensitive ones that will try things they see," Sackeyfio said.

In general, people need to be more aware that eating disorders are severe physical illnesses and that these teens aren't just trying to be manipulative, he said.

Both Peebles and Sackeyfio recommended that parents not deny their children access to the Internet, but instead learn more about what sites they're visiting and talk with them about it.

And, Sackeyfio said, it's crucial to find a health-care professional well-educated in eating disorders and their treatment.

More information

To learn more about possible causes of eating disorders, visit the National Eating Disorders Association.

 
Google
Web www.iconocast.com
 
 
 

 

Continue News With: News4 ; News5 ; News6 ; News7 ; News8 ; News9 ; Nedws9A


ADVERTISEMENT

Iconocast is about learning and teaching without borders; we offer eMarketing, Internet Advertising, Internet Marketing, Search Engine Optimization, Search Engine Marketing, Online Branding, and eMarketing News Services. Home

 

 © 2002-2006

Keywords::

Contact Iconocast

Home Page