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More men seek treatment for their eating disorders
By Associated Press
Published May 12, 2004
Intentional starvation, cookie binges, vomiting, hospitalization. The details were typical for an eating disorder.
But Jeff Everts might not seem like a typical sufferer.
In an era of diet fixation, chiseled underwear models and "a culture of muscularity," some researchers say eating problems among men are getting worse - even as sufferers face a lingering stigma about having a "women's disorder."
"We're able to hide it much better," said Everts, a 43-year-old Albuquerque, N.M., resident recovering from anorexia and bulimia. "We don't talk about it, where women would."
Women are more likely to have eating disorders than men. But men can also suffer from bulimia, binge eating and, to a lesser extent, anorexia, according to researchers.
Leigh Cohn, co-author of Making Weight, believes such disorders afflict about 2 percent of men versus 4 percent to 5 percent of women, and he is convinced the rate for men is on the rise. There are no definitive studies.
"It's hard to know because men have been so reluctant to seek treatment," Cohn said. "And men, in many cases, are unaware that they have an eating disorder. For example, they may exercise obsessively and just think that's regular guy exercise behavior."
Athletes whose weight is crucial to their performance - jockeys, wrestlers, distance runners and gymnasts - have a higher incidence of eating disorders. Cohn said they can develop bad habits when weight loss is seen as a requirement of the sport.
The root causes can be similar for men and women: genetics, low self-esteem, trauma and cultural influences.
Just as women feel pressured to look like stick-thin magazine models, men can be swayed by images of pumped-up hunks with broad shoulders, six-pack abs and narrow waists. Pictures of perfect bodies can reinforce the belief that "normal" bodies are not okay, researchers say.
Researchers at the University of Central Florida released a study this month saying men who watched TV commercials of muscular actors felt unhappy about their own physiques. This "culture of muscularity" can be linked to eating disorders or steroid abuse, the researchers said.
The book The Adonis Complex tracks the evolution of boys' action figures. Scaled to human size, the authors say one Wolverine action figure would have 32-inch biceps.
"Basically they're marketing to men in the same way they marketed to women," said Roberto Olivardia, co-author of the book. "And I think men and young boys have responded to that."
Rogers Memorial Hospital in Oconomowoc, Wis., offers residential treatment for males, and Dr. Theodore Weltzin says he sees a fair number of dieting men there who are "carbohydrate-phobic," as opposed to women sufferers who tend to be fat-phobic.
"More males are engaged in really abnormal eating behavior in terms of skipping meals, in terms of engaging in purging after eating, and laxative use," he said.
Everts said his disorder appeared in high school in the late 1970s, when he began eating less and exercising more to become a better athlete. The 5-foot-10 football player got all the way down to 96 pounds, a hospital room and, eventually, a psychiatric ward.
"They just basically said, "If you eat, you'll get out,' " he said. That triggered a new problem: binge eating. Everts eventually found help, though he still considers himself recovering. He now weighs around 134 pounds - within the normal weight range for a man his height.
Weltzin expects to see more male eating disorder cases: "I don't see where percentages are going to go anywhere but up."
[Last modified May 12, 2004, 01:57:14]
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