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Nutrition

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Title: Nutrition


1
Nutrition Self -Perception
  • Dianna Spies Sorenson, PhD, RN, CNS

2
My Body
  • What do you look like?

3
My Body
  • What do you look like?
  • What do you like? List it.

4
My Body
  • What do you look like?
  • What do you like? List it.
  • What dont you like? List it.

5
My Body
  • What do you look like?
  • What do you like? List it.
  • What dont you like? List it.
  • Draw your body as it is

6
My Body
  • What do you look like?
  • What do you like? List it.
  • What dont you like? List it.
  • Draw your body as it is
  • Draw your body how youd like it to be

7
My Body
  • What do you look like?
  • What do you like? List it.
  • What dont you like? List it.
  • Draw your body as it is.
  • Draw your body how youd like it to be.
  • What did you discover?

8
Definitions
  • Self concept "concept of oneself through
    description rather than evaluative judgments."
    Reber, 1985
  • "an organized configuration of perceptions of the
    self which are admissible to awareness."
    (Somstroem, 1998).
  • Self esteem the evaluation affect one holds
    for this personal picture competence self
    acceptance/satisfaction. (Somstroem, 1998)
  • Body Image "one's view of his/her body, state
    of health, physical appearance, skills
    sexuality." (Roid and Fifts, 1994).
  • Self concept might be related to a persons
    overall personality and mental health and may
    affect a person's behavior. A study done by
    Stower's and Durm to confirm correlations for
    both men and women between physical self and
    over-all self concept and examine the gender
    differences in those relationships to test the
    hypothesis that women have a more diminished body
    image than men. results showed that there was a
    significant relationship between body image and
    over-all self concept for both men women and woen
    had significantly lower body image scores than
    men. therefore, body image and over-all self
    image are related,

9
Physical Self-Concept
  • process of separating self from the environment
    others discovering personal causation
  • environmental testing and learning from the
    response of others
  • Cooley's "Looking glass theory
  • observing comparing selves to our perceptions
    of others strengths weaknesses

10
Ideal Vs. Real
  • The Ideal American Woman
  • Height 57 weight 110 lbs

11
Ideal Vs. Real
  • The Ideal American Woman
  • Height 57 Weight 110 lbs
  • The Actual American Woman
  • Height 54 Weight 144 lbs

12
Cultural/Economic Value Influence on Womens Size
  • Amt. of body fat considered attractive in a
    culture is inversely correlated with
  • the value of women's work
  • degree of political power
  • control over economic resources
  • Body fat is more prized in subsistence economies
    than in advanced industrial ones.

13
Historical View of Body Distortion Influence on
Children
  • 1950s Lilli cartoon appeared in West German
    Tabloid Bild Zeitung
  • featured as a sex idol
  • became prototype for American Barbie doll
  • Barbie as a real woman
  • long neck
  • 38 bust
  • 18 waist
  • 34 hips
  • 510 tall
  • extra long legs

14
Changes in Body Attractiveness Standards
  • curvaceousness ? over time from 1901-1993 (U.S.)
  • ? economic prosperity
  • ? womens participation in the economy
  • Higher education among women
  • ? Proportion of single women to men (20-24 y/o)
  • Birth rate declined

15
Body Image in Middle Older Age Women
  • women 65 years
  • 62 wanted to lose wt, when 65 were normal
    weight
  • ?? wt dissatisfaction with higher educ.
  • 42 dieted for wt control including 67 who were
    nl wt. Within past 5 vs.

16
Body Image and Men
  • Androgenic-anabolic steroids and body dysmorphia
    in young men is a manifestation of body
    dissatisfaction
  • Societal trends Muscular mesomorphic physique
  • Attractive body success
  • Media presentation Schwarzenegger Stallone
  • Male athletes have higher risk for eating
    disorders

17
Nutrition and Adolescent Females
  • college students with the greatest body
    dissatisfaction reported the lowest frequency of
    recent sexual activity
  • healthiest eating attitudes associated with a
    positive self-esteem low levels of anxiety

18
Diet/Eating Patterns General Statistics
  • 90 H.S. Jr/Sr. girls regularly diet when only
    10-15 are over weight via ht/wt standards

19
General Statistics on Older Adults (U.S.)
  • 40 men 30 women 75 yr. are at least 10
    under weight
  • 50 65 yr. are clinically malnourished at
    hospital admission 66 are malnourished at
    discharge.
  • weight loss can be an independent predictor of
    increased mortality
  • 31 males 61 females 65 yr. make food budget

20
Factors R/T Development of Body Image
Preoccupation
  • teasing
  • social comparisons
  • socially rx perfectionism
  • discrepancy between perception actual self
  • low self esteem
  • image used to "fit in"
  • body used for romantic sexual attractiveness
  • over est. leanness as attractive to men

21
Development of a Negative Body Image
Historical Causes
Socialization by Culture
InterpersonalExperiences
PersonalityCharacteristics
Current Causes
ActivatingEvents Situations
Assumptions, Interpretations, Thoughts on
Appearance
Body ImageEmotions
Self-Defensive Actions
22
Socialization by Culture
  • Media
  • Rewards (money, power, position)
  • Sexuality Definitions
  • Food Industry
  • Plastic Surgeons
  • Dieting Industry
  • Gender Role Prescription

23
Interpersonal Experiences
  • Discrimination
  • Oppression
  • Criticism
  • Jokes
  • Family Beliefs/Values

24
Personality Characteristics
  • Perfectionistic
  • Sensitive
  • Enmeshed
  • Unhappy
  • Low Self-Esteem
  • Inability to have express emotions

25
Activating Events Situations
  • Humiliation
  • Shame-inducing
  • Powerless
  • Vulnerability
  • Rebuke
  • Teasing

26
Assumptions, Interpretations, Thoughts on
Appearance
  • Magnification (e.g. Distortion of size)
  • Overgeneralization (e.g. everyone is thinner
    than me)
  • Polarization (Concrete all or nothing
    classification of good/bad, e.g. Fat is bad
  • Competition against others/world (e.g. Im only
    important if I am thinner than the rest)
  • Mind-Body Division
  • Magical thinking (e.g. Everything -sex, love,
    friends, luck- would be better if I were thin
  • Personalization (e.g. this only happened to me
    because Im fat)

27
Body Image Emotions
  • Unacceptability
  • Self-Hatred
  • Weakness
  • Anxiety
  • Depression
  • Guilt Shame
  • Humiliation

28
Self-Defensive Actions
  • Avoidance (persons, places, situations, foods,
    photos, physical contact)
  • Food Restriction (diet)
  • Indulgence (binge)
  • Continual attempts to control eating behaviors

29
Body Image of Eating Disordered
  • Body image concerns are largely r/t the pursuit
    of beauty attractiveness
  • Thinness associated with personal
    accomplishments, attractiveness, higher social
    status

30
Continuum of Eating Patterns
  • Healthy Eating
  • Hungry/Eat
  • No guilt
  • No over/under eating
  • Flexibility in food, time, location, etc
  • Varied intake
  • Disordered Eating
  • Worried
  • Body wrong
  • Better if thinner
  • Food avoidance
  • Count cal, gm., etc
  • Diets
  • Restrictions
  • ? exercise
  • Eating Disorder
  • Pathologic// destructive eating
  • Eat to express emotional
  • Disconnected from body needs
  • Rigid eating patterns
  • Invariable intake

31
(No Transcript)
32
Definition Anorexia Nervosa
  • Self- imposed food restriction starvation in an
    obsessive effort to lose weight achieve an
    unrealistic ideal of thinness
  • DSMIV

33
Definition Bulimia Nervosa
  • An episodic pattern of binge eating where large
    amounts of food are eaten quickly, followed by
    some form of purging (I.e. vomiting, laxative,
    exercise) in an effort to avoid weight gain.
  • DSMIV

34
Anorexia Bulimia Comparison/Contrast
35
Anorexia/Bulimia Prevalence In U.S.
  • 5 million Americans
  • 70 all women struggle with wt/body image
  • 1 all adolescent girls develop anorexia
  • 2-5 develop bulimia
  • 10 anorectic/ bulimic are men

36
Anorexia/Bulimia Prevalence International
  • Fijian girls
  • vomiting to control weight
  • 1995 3
  • 1999 15
  • 1998
  • 74 felt too fat/too big
  • 62 dieted in past mo.
  • 5 x ? in 4 yr.. since TV introduced

37
Causes of Anorexia/Bulimia
  • Hereditary - anxiety disorder (serotonin)
  • Socio/cultural
  • Intergenerational transmission process
  • learned behavior
  • Capitalism
  • advertising/ product promotion
  • Media portrayals

38
Gender Differences
  • 90-95 of eating disorders occur in females

39
Cognitive View of Bulimia Nervosa Maintenance
Negative self-evaluation
Characteristic extreme concerns about shape wt
Perfectionism dichotomous thinking
Intense rigid dieting
Perfectionism dichotomous thinking
Binge Eating
Negative affect
Purging
40
Definition of Hunger
  • Hunger A strong desire or need for food
    discomfort, weakness or pain caused by prolonged
    lack of food

41
Definition of Appetite
  • Appetite An instinctive physical desire,
    especially for food or drink strong wish or urge

42
Definition of Satiety
  • Satiety The condition of being full or
    gratified the power of foods to stop eating at
    the end of a meal suppress eating between meals

43
Disruption of Appetite Control - Infants to Adults
  • Physiologic Regulation
  • Eats preferred food
  • Eats when hungry
  • Regulates calories within/ between meals
  • Appetite Disruption
  • Parental Control of food
  • Socialization of eatingeating schedules
  • Food as a reward for comfort
  • Psychologic Regulation
  • Uses food for pleasure or reward
  • Disregards physical hunger perceives feelings as
    hunger
  • Responds to social environ. Vs. internal cues

44
Relationships Among Hunger, Appetite Satiety
Hunger is there anything to eat?
Appetite What do I want to eat?
Satiety
Satiety
Food Intake
45
Rate Your Fat Oppression Behaviors
  • NEVER
    DAILY
  • 1 2 3 4
    5

46
Over-Weight/Obesity Prevalence In U.S.
  • Obese (BMI 30)
  • 22
  • 1962 12.8
  • 1980 14
  • 1999 22.3
  • Obesity ? 1963-1980
  • Overall 20 ?
  • 54 ? children
  • 39 ? adolescents
  • Overweight (BMII25- 30)
  • 34 total population are over wt or obese
  • 27 children (6-11)
  • 15 adolescents
  • 27 women (20-74)
  • 24 men

47
Obesity Prevalence International
  • Fiji
  • 74 girls obese
  • 84 obese in studied villages (highest in the
    world)

48
Causes of Obesity
  • Caloric intake exceeds energy needed
  • Genetic Factors
  • Environmental Factors
  • Lifestyle Behaviors
  • Psychological Factors
  • Rare illnesses
  • Drugs

49
Health Risks of Obesity
  • diabetes
  • heart disease, high blood pressure, stroke
  • cancer
  • men colon, rectum, prostate
  • women gallbladder, breast, gynecologic
  • gallbladder/gallstones
  • osteoarthritis gout
  • pulmonary problems
  • sleep apnea
  • 2 x ? premature death If 40 overweight

50
Costs of Obesity
  • Direct Costs to US annual economy
  • DM, stroke, CHD 238 billion
  • CHD alone costs 50 billion
  • 5 billion spent on home exercise/ weight-loss
    equipment
  • Indirect Costs US annual economy
  • depression
  • premature death
  • quality of life

51
  • Dieting is a normative but non-benign
    developmental phenomenon with negative physical,
    psychological, and behavioral effects
  • Michael Levine, 1994

52
Feeling Fat
Self-Punishment
Stringent Diet
Shame
Depression,
Guilt
Compulsive Eating
Incompetent, Out of Control
53
  • Dieting worsens the problems--overeating, food
    obsessions body shame--that it purports to
    solve. And it wreaks havoc on moods, lives
    emotions
  • -L.Fraser. 1977

54
Warning Signs Meal Behaviors
  • Hiding food
  • Caloric restriction
  • Dissecting food
  • Arranging food
  • Over-seasoning
  • Improper use of utensils
  • Stauned conversation
  • Slow meal pace
  • Tense body language

55
Warning Signs
  • Chronic Dieting
  • Caloric Restriction
  • Binge Activities
  • Preoccupation with food (prep, eating, fretting
    about what was eaten)
  • Preoccupation with body shape or weight

56
Warning Signs, cont.
  • Abuse of laxatives, enemas, ipecac, diet pills
  • Inordinate exercise
  • Generalized depression
  • Continuous social comparison
  • Eliminates bad (forbidden) foods

57
Warning Signs, cont.
  • Eating when not hungry
  • C/o overeating
  • Guilt/remorse/ depression after eating
  • Secretive eating /sneaking foods
  • Food used to calm self

58
Warning Signs, cont.
  • Menstrual irregularities
  • Hair loss
  • Perfectionism
  • Avoidance (pictures, people, places, situations,
    physical contact)

59
Warning Signs, cont.
  • Dental decay
  • Constipation/diarrhea
  • Muscle weakness
  • Chemical imbalances (dehydration, edema, cardiac
    irregularities, etc)
  • esophageal stomach irritation

60
Assessments
  • Determine
  • Target weight
  • Nutritional status
  • Dietary patterns
  • Family processes
  • Medical Stability
  • Degree of cognitive impairment

61
Nutrition Risk Assessment Tools
62
General Interventions
  • Be aware of own beliefs, attitudes behaviors
    how they affect your life the lives of others
  • Role model regular, balanced, nutritious meals
  • Dont avoid clothes, activities, situations that
    display your body

63
General Interventions, cont.
  • Emphasize moderation in all aspects of living
    (exercise, eating, sleeping, etc.)
  • Eat and encourage eating for the right reasons,
    I.e. energy restoration, health, strength
  • Resist media distortions (power, excitement,
    sexuality)

64
Specific Interventions
  • Nutritional Rehabilitation
  • Psychotherapy
  • Cognitive-behavioral
  • Interpersonal
  • Psychoeducational
  • Education
  • Group Therapy

65
Outcomes Measurement
  • Self-management of eating pattern
  • Maintenance of medically safe wt.
  • Resumption of menstruation
  • Acceptance of body wt/shape
  • Non-destructive emotional expression
  • General health measures

66
Prevention
  • Primary
  • Eliminate or reduce personal, social, cultural
    factors
  • Develop individual social strengths
  • Secondary
  • ID warning signs
  • recognize
  • reach out
  • collaborate
  • Develop systems within schools, workplace,
    communities to TX support
  • Tertiary
  • prevent progression to chronic debilitation
  • Arrange for community support for continuing TX
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