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Motivation to Eat

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Title: Motivation to Eat


1
Motivation to Eat
  • Michelle Deming
    Karin Kassab
  • Johan Icard
    Charlotte Leuth

2
Hunger and Eating Based on Biology
  • Stomach Contraction Theory We know when we are
    hungry when our stomach contracts (Cannon and
    Washburn 1995). (Balloon Study)
  • Later opposed when it was discovered that people
    whose stomachs were removed still felt hungry.
  • The glucose theory states that we feel hungry
    when our blood glucose level is low. (Bash,
    1994).
  • The Insulin theory states that we feel hungry
    when our insulin level increases suddenly in our
    bodies (Heller Heller, 1991).
  • The Fatty Acid theory states that our body has
    receptors that detect an increase in the level of
    fatty acid. Activation of the receptor for fatty
    acid triggers hunger (Dole, 1956, Klein et al.,
    1960, cited in Franklin, 1994).
  • Heat-Production theory states that we feel hungry
    when our body temperature drops, and when it
    rises, the hunger decreases. (as cited in
    Franklin, 1994).

3
The Biological Basis
  • It is an intricate feedback system in which
    energy expenditure and food intake are balanced.
    The brain responds to hormonal signals that
    maintain body weight by telling us when to start
    and stop eating and how much to consume. One
    central player is leptin, a hormone produced by
    fat cells in the stomach, which suppresses
    appetite and stimulates energy expenditure. Other
    weight-regulating hormones are ghrelin (an
    appetite stimulant), insulin, the orexins, and
    cholecystokinin. The neurotransmitters serotonin,
    norepinephrine, and dopamine are also involved.
    When fat stores diminish, hunger increases and
    metabolic processes slow down to use energy more
    efficiently.

4
The Biological Basis, continued
  • The system is remarkably accurate, but over a
    lifetime even a slight imbalance adds up. To gain
    a pound a year, an adult need eat only an extra
    10 or 20 calories a day. How much it takes
    depends partly on heredity. Weight is as
    heritable as height, and nearly two dozen genes
    are known to control the production of
    weight-regulating hormones. Heavier people do not
    necessarily eat more than average, and they are
    not necessarily less active. There is evidence
    that the obese have congenitally low sensitivity
    to leptin. Experiments on mice suggest that
    individual variation in the tendency to gain
    weight may depend on the action of
    weight-regulating hormones during early
    development.

5
Hunger and Eating Based on Learning
  • Humans use an external clock in daily routines,
    including when to sleep and when to eat. This
    external time triggers hunger. (learned behavior)
  • Taste, smell, or texture of food also triggers
    hunger. These preferences are culturally learned.

6
Hunger Based in Environment
  • Many environmental factors influence hunger,
    including the availability of rich foods, taste
    preferences, habits, memory, stress, and cultural
    attitudes
  • Availability of rich foods People tend to gain
    weight when rich foods are plentiful.
  • Preferences Some taste preferences appear to be
    innate, such as the preference for fatty foods.
    However, people acquire most taste preferences
    through conditioning or observational learning.
    People tend to prefer familiar foods. These
    preferences have an influence on hunger and food
    intake.
  • Habits People learn habits, such as when and how
    much they eat. These habits also influence hunger
    and food intake.
  • Memory The memory of what people last ate and
    when they ate it influences hunger.
  • Stress The increased physiological arousal
    associated with stressful situations can
    stimulate hunger in some people. In other people,
    stress decreases hunger.
  • Cultural attitudes Cultural attitudes about
    ideal body size and shape have a strong influence
    on what and how much people eat.

7
Environmental and Social Factors
  • Social factors including poverty and a lower
    level of education have been linked to obesity.
    One reason for this may be that high-calorie
    processed foods cost less and are easier to find
    and prepare than healthier foods, such as fresh
    vegetables and fruits. Other reasons may include
    inadequate access to safe recreation places or
    the cost of gym memberships, limiting
    opportunities for physical activity. However, the
    link between low socio-economic status and
    obesity has not been conclusively established,
    and recent research shows that obesity is also
    increasing among high-income groups.

8
Hunger and Eating Based on Cognition
  • Colors also contribute to hunger.
  • For example, looking at a yellow banana makes one
    to want to eat it, but a red banana does not.
    Similarly, red or green can trigger hunger for an
    apple, but not blue. It is hard to find natural
    food with blue color, because mother nature does
    not produce blue food. Blue is said to be an
    appetite suppressant.
  • In addition, many people eat foods base on their
    knowledge of what foods are good for them. For
    example, low fat, low sugar, and low sodium food
    are said to be good. Eventually people learn to
    change their preference and want to eat "good
    food" only (Franken, 1994).

9
Mind and Body Connection of Hunger
  • Hunger is a primary motivation. Despite strong
    beliefs that hunger is caused biologically, this
    motivation is controlled not just by physiology,
    but also psychology as well.
  • There are two kinds of hungers one is caused
    physiologically, and the other is caused
    psychologically. What makes human beings
    different from animals is that we eat not only to
    feed our bodies to satiate physiological hunger,
    but also to feed our minds to satiate
    psychological hunger as well.
  • Problems like eating disorders and obesity could
    occur because we mistakenly keep tying to satiate
    our psychological hunger by eating food. Thus,
    hunger is not only about how the body changes
    physiologically, it is about how our body and
    mind together are well fed, not just by the food
    that one can put in their mouth, but also by the
    whole environment around us (Hara, 1997).

10
Motivations Behind Eating
  • The consumption of food is a basic daily activity
    for most however, for some, this vital need is
    clouded by physical and emotional turmoil. In the
    following slides, we will explore an array of
    normal and problematic behaviors associated with
    eating in America in this day and age.

11
Anorexia Nervosa
  • Defined by http//www.yourmentalhealthinfo.com/eat
    ing_disorder.htm as, An eating disorder that
    causes extreme weight loss due to starvation. 
    This eating disorder can affect anyone at any
    age, but it mostly occurs in young women.
    Anorexia symptoms include an intense concern with
    weight, not eating to control weight, and no
    regard for physical and mental health.

12
Anorexia Statistics
  • Research suggests that approximately one percent
    (1) of female adolescents suffer from anorexia
    (ANRED Anorexia Nervosa and Related Eating
    Disorders).
  • Females are known to struggle with anorexia more
    commonly than males, with statistics showing only
    10 of all anorexia and bulimia sufferers as male
    (ANRED).

13
Anorexia Some Basic Facts
  • Most anorexics appear excessively thin and
    emaciated to the average person.
  • The anorexic is concerned with both appearance
    and control and these tend to be the main
    motivations behind the development of the
    disorder. Research shows than many young women
    resort to anorexia as a way of gaining control
    over their weight when they can not gain control
    over anything else in life.
  • Anorexics may know that they have a problem and
    be motivated to get better, but they are hindered
    when they look in the mirror and still feel they
    are too big.
  • Many anorexics are known to be perfectionists as
    well, which supports the notion that they feel
    like they are never good enough and never thin
    enough.
  • Sufferers are known to keep their disorder
    hidden, as not to attract unwanted attention,
    which may force them to seek treatment.
  • Anorexia can be connected to obsessive-compulsive
    behaviors because the anorexic is constantly
    thinking (obsessing) and acting (compulsions) in
    ways that center around weight and food.
  • All information on this page came from
    http//www.calorierestriction.org/CR_vs_Anorexia

14
Bulimia Nervosa
  • Defined by http//www.medterms.com/script/main/ar
    t.asp?articlekey2546 as, An eating disorder
    characterized by episodes of secretive excessive
    eating (binge-eating) followed by inappropriate
    methods of weight control, such as self-induced
    vomiting (purging), abuse of laxatives and
    diuretics, or excessive exercise. The insatiable
    appetite of bulimia is often interrupted by
    periods of anorexia

15
Bulimia Statistics
  • Research suggests that approximately four percent
    (4) of all college aged women suffer from
    bulimia (ANRED).
  • About 50 of those who have anorexia will go on
    to develop bulimic tendencies as well (ANRED).
  • Like anorexia, bulimia is much less common in
    males. Males make up about 10 of the total
    population of anorexia and bulimia sufferers
    combined (ANRED).

16
Bulimia Some Basic Facts
  • Bulimics tend to be of average weight some are
    even characterized as being slightly chubby.
  • Many bulimics are known to have impulse-control
    problems (hence the binge eating that occurs with
    the disorder), as well as anxiety and depression
    problems.
  • Bulimia sufferers tend to try to take on more
    than they can handle within their daily lives
    (activities, responsibilities, relationships,
    etc.) and then fall short of expectations (either
    their own or others). Generally, binge eating is
    a coping mechanism for the bulimic, who
    immediately feels the need to purge out of guilt
    afterwards.
  • Bulimics hide their behaviors just as anorexics
    do. They binge when they are completely alone
    there is no danger of being interrupted. If they
    are interrupted, they will immediately stop and
    attempt to cover their tracks.
  • Genetic factors contribute to both anorexia and
    bulimia, but the exact role that genes play is
    yet to be determined.
  • Information on this page provided by
    http//www.anred.com/index.html

17
Calorie Restriction
  • Calorie Restriction (abbreviated as CR) is a
    relatively new phenomenon in which people
    restrict their daily caloric intake in order to
    live healthier and longer lives.
  • Calorierestriction.org says the following about
    CR, The goal of Calorie Restriction is to
    achieve a longer and healthier life by eating
    fewer calories, and consuming adequate vitamins,
    minerals, and other essential nutrients.

18
CR versus Anorexia
  • Since CR is a relatively drastic lifestyle change
    for most people, it has been accused of being a
    slightly less problematic version of anorexia.
  • Calorierestriction.org maintains that CR has very
    little in common with anorexia, claiming that the
    motivations behind CR are to live longer and
    healthier lives, while anorexics have no regard
    for health.

19
Calorie Restriction Some Basic Facts
  • Unlike anorexia, bulimia, and most other types of
    disordered eating, CR is done out in the open it
    is not hidden.
  • Those who practice CR view their lifestyle as
    good and healthy.
  • CR allows cheating without guilt. For example,
    eating a piece of cake on ones birthday is
    considered fine and is not to be seen as failure.
  • CR requires the acceptance of oneself - and the
    act of eating -- as imperfect.
    (calorierestriction.org)
  • While the anorexic tends to view food as the
    enemy, the CR practitioner regards food highly,
    as life-sustaining and healthy.
  • Perhaps the largest difference between CR and
    anorexia is the fact that CR is not about weight
    or appearance, it is about health and longevity.
    Anorexia is about control and body image.
  • Video http//www.cbsnews.com/stories/2005/12/30/e
    veningnews/main1172297.shtml

20
Orthorexia Nervosa
  • Some doctors think othorexia is just a
    manifestation from OCD centered around food.
  • Dr. Steven Bratman is the man credited with
    discovering orthorexia nervosa or at least
    classifying it as a disorder in 1997.
  • It is a pathological and unhealthy obsession for
    a strict, pure, and healthy diet. These people
    build a diet by excluding foods with herbicides,
    pesticides, or artificial substances. They spend
    a lot of time worrying about these foods if they
    consume them and then it will cause depression.
    Social relationships are lost because this
    obsession with their diet becomes the most
    important part of their life. Many people with
    orthorexia will not eat food prepared by their
    parents or friends or anyone else they trust,
    even if they are starving. A lot of times they
    will lose a lot of weight as well and be mistaken
    for having anorexia

21
Orthorexia Nervosa, continued
  • These disorders are usually worked out, but there
    was a case in December of 2003 where woman named
    Kate Finn died from heart failure shortly after
    recovering from orthorexia.
  • Symptoms include the obsession with healthy
    eating or even starving. Those who suffer from
    orthorexia tend to have an uncontrollable desire
    to eat when feeling guilty, nervous, happy, or
    excited.
  • It is long term or it wouldn't be orthorexia it
    would just be a diet plan. But it is abnormal to
    continue obsessing about these foods after
    reaching your desired weight, which is what
    sufferers from orthorexia do.
  • The big difference between othorexia and anorexia
    is that anorexic people obsess on the quantity of
    food they take in where as orthorexic people
    obsess over quality.

22
Bigorexia (Muscle Mania)
  • Bigorexia or muscular dysmorphia was also named
    so in 1997 and is commonly referred to as
    reverse anorexia. It is usually a subtype of
    OCD, depression, or Body Dysmorphic Disorder.
    Almost all of them suffer from depression as well
    and develop this from trying to counteract or
    ignore their depression. Whats worse?
  • It is their brain which cant seem to map out
    their bodys boundaries.
  • Most of the men and women with this disorder are
    weightlifters even though many are still shy to
    show their bodies off. They will also skip work
    or other important events to continue building
    their physique and will even work through
    injuries and broken bones.
  • Strict diets are key in bigorexia. Many men wont
    eat out because of their diets. Instead they
    carry their calorie filled snacks with them
    wherever they go to obtain the required 4000-5000
    daily. But some develop bulimia from their
    dieting.
  • They have a distorted body image, thinking they
    are smaller than the next man when in actuality
    they are a lot bigger.

23
Bigorexia, continued
  • Men with bigorexia often use steroids to help
    reach their desired physique and they will
    continue to use steroids through their side
    effects which include increased aggression, acne,
    breast growth, balding, impotence, and testicular
    shrinkage.
  • Causes are most likely from pressure from society
    for men to look muscular and lean.
  • These people are more concerned with body fat
    percentage and not being overweight, which is one
    big difference from other eating disorders.
  • However, bigorexia is under-diagnosed since it is
    acceptable in our society for men to look so huge
    and most assume they are no other than the
    average, healthy bodybuilder.
  • A study of 1000 men showed that about forty
    percent would consider chest implants

24
Pica
  • Pica is defined as a compulsive craving for
    eating , chewing, or licking non-food items or
    food containing no nutrition.
  • These may include but are not limited to such
    things as chalk, plaster, paint, chips, baking
    soda, starch, glue, rust, ice, coffee grounds,
    and cigarette ashes.
  • Current populations at high risk include young
    children, pregnant women, developmentally delayed
    individuals, psychiatric and mentally disables
    individuals, low SES, individual who live in the
    Southeastern U.S., stressed individuals, and
    individuals with a family history of pica.
  • Pica and its causes remain controversial.
    Published theories range from nutritional ,
    sensory, neuro-psychiatric and psychosocial to
    cultural.

25
Rumination
  • Rumination is defined as the voluntary or
    involuntary regurgitation and rechewing of
    partially digested food that is either
    reswallowed or expelled.
  • The behavior must exists for at least one moth
    with evidence of normal functioning prior to
    onset. Frequency may vary, but typically occurs
    daily and may persist for months or years.
  • The onset is usually within the first year of
    life but rumination among adolescents and adults
    with normal intelligence is gaining increased
    recognition.
  • Although the etiology of rumination is unknown,
    cultural, SES, organic, and psychodynamic factors
    have been implicated

26
United States Obesity Timeline
  • http//health.msn.com/reports/obesity/default.aspx
    ?GT18307//health.msn.com/reports/obesity/default.
    aspx?GT18307

27
OBESITY Definitions
  • 60 percent of adult Americans weigh too much, and
    17 percent of American children and teens are
    overweight or obese, too. Overweight is defined
    as having a body mass index (BMI) of between 25
    and 29.9, and obese as having a BMI of 30 or
    higher.
  • "Obesity" specifically refers to an excessive
    amount of body fat.
  • "Overweight" refers to an excessive amount of
    body weight that includes muscle, bone, fat, and
    water.

28
BMI information
  • women have more body fat than men. Most health
    care professionals agree that men with more than
    25 percent body fat and women with more than 30
    percent body fat are obese. These numbers should
    not be confused with the body mass index (BMI),
    however, which is more commonly used by health
    care professionals to determine the effect of
    body weight on the risk for some diseases
  • The BMI is a tool used to assess overweight and
    obesity and monitor changes in body weight. Like
    the weight-for-height tables, BMI has its
    limitations because it does not measure body fat
    or muscle directly. It is calculated by dividing
    a person's weight in pounds by height in inches
    squared and multiplied by 703.

29
Why is obesity such a problem?
  • There is mounting evidence that shows lack of
    access to healthy food is associated with
    obesity, says MSN Health Fitness Nutrition
    Expert Keecha Harris. Harris is president of
    Harris and Associates, a food systems and
    public-health consulting firm based in
    Birmingham, Ala.

30
Does money play a role?
  • Scientists are studying the relationship between
    economic status and weight. The Journal of
    American Medical Association published a study in
    May 2006 from researchers at Johns Hopkins
    University indicating that teenagers who are
    living at or below the poverty line show a
    greater prevalence of being overweight than
    teenagers who do not live in economically
    depressed areas.

31
Some other factors
  • MSNs Weight Loss and Fitness Expert Martica
    Heaner, an exercise physiologist and
    nutritionist, explains that while the rate of
    obesity is growing everywhere, obesity may affect
    more Americans in areas where driving is a must
    because of urban sprawl, or in very rural parts
    of America.

32
By Harvard Health Publications
  • At one time it was commonly believed that
    overweight and obese people were compulsive
    eaters, anxious, depressed, under stress, or
    trying to compensate for inadequate upbringing,
    family conflict, or other deficiencies in their
    lives. But since then, when almost everyone seems
    to be getting heavier and obesity has become a
    national political issue, both experts and the
    public are turning away from the idea that weight
    gain is a personal emotional problem. Instead the
    trend toward obesity has become a subject for
    biologists and sociologists, regarded as the
    physical consequence of a general social
    condition.

33
Abundance and Frustration
  • The average American weighs 7 to 10 pounds more
    in 2004 than in 1990.
  • The name of the self-help group Overeaters
    Anonymous proclaims an analogy between overeating
    and addiction to alcohol or drugs. Some
    scientists who investigate food cravings take
    that idea seriously. Brain scans and animal
    experiments are suggesting that some of the same
    brain centers are active in both food addiction
    and drug addiction. And the same social changes
    may be involved as well. The industrial
    revolution that has provided some parts of the
    world with abundant, highly processed,
    easy-to-eat food is also loosing a flood of
    chemically pure injectable drugs of abuse.

34
Mental Health and Weight
  • The American Psychiatric Association has never
    regarded overeating or excess weight as a
    psychiatric disorder, and most obese people do
    not qualify for a psychiatric diagnosis. Most
    studies find no clear association between mental
    health and weight. In a review of 16 studies, 6
    found that obese people were more mentally
    healthy than average, 7 found them to be less
    mentally healthy than average, and 3 found no
    difference. Some studies link depression or
    behavior problems with obesity in children, but
    the evidence is incomplete and inconsistent,
    especially after taking account of their parents
    emotional problems.
  • Some research suggests that depressed persons are
    more likely to develop a metabolic syndrome
    (insulin resistance, high blood pressure, excess
    abdominal fat, high cholesterol) that often
    accompanies excess weight, especially when it is
    deposited around the waist. In a survey of 40,000
    Americans, high body weight was associated with
    symptoms of depression in women, although not in
    men.

35
Mental Health and Weight, continued
  • Research in mice and humans suggests that food
    high in fat, sugar, and calories lowers the
    bodys response to chronic stress. In animal
    experiments, weight loss activates the stress
    response. People may console themselves with
    "comfort food" because they are anxious, lonely,
    angry, or suffering from low self-esteem. There
    is a characteristic type of depression with
    symptoms that include lethargy and overeating.
  • Obesity can lead to ill health, which is linked
    to depression and anxiety. Overweight people are
    also more likely to lose the psychological
    benefits of exercise. If they feel rejected as
    unattractive or suffer social discrimination, the
    further emotional strain may cause further weight
    gain. The problem is worse if they fail to lose
    weight and are blamed (or blame themselves) for
    lack of self-control. (Some believe anorexia
    nervosa seemingly voluntary self-starvation
    is the out-of-control result of an attempt to
    demonstrate a capacity for self-control.)

36
Binge Eating
  • There is one potential psychiatric diagnosis that
    is closely related to obesity, even if it is only
    "proposed for further study." In the American
    Psychiatric Associations Diagnostic Manual,
    binge eating disorder is tentatively defined as a
    condition that involves at least three of the
    following symptoms occurring at least twice a
    week for six months eating very fast, eating
    until uncomfortably full, eating when not hungry,
    eating alone, and feeling disgusted or guilty
    after eating. Its distinguished from bulimia by
    the absence of fasting, exercise, or vomiting to
    compensate.

37
Binge Eating, continued
  • As many as 5 of Americans may be binge eaters at
    some time in their lives, including nearly half
    of the people enrolled in commercial weight-loss
    programs. Like body weight, binge eating disorder
    is highly heritable a Norwegian twin study found
    that 40 of individual differences in
    susceptibility had a genetic basis. Binge eating
    is associated with depression and even more
    strongly with anxiety disorders, including panic
    disorder, obsessive-compulsive disorder, and
    post-traumatic stress disorder.
  • In July of 2004, the statement that "obesity
    itself cannot be considered an illness" was
    removed from the Medicare manual, opening the way
    to insurance coverage of any treatment that is
    proved to be effective. The change will stimulate
    research, including studies of behavioral and
    psychological counseling as well as diet and
    exercise programs and gastric bypass surgery. In
    the weight wars, depression, anxiety, and low
    self-esteem deserve attention even if they
    represent only a small part of a big problem.

38
Harvard Health Publications
  • Obesity is not a new problem. Forty years ago, 4
    of every 10 Americans were overweight or obese.
    But obesity is a growing problem, and its
    growing quickly today, two of every three
    Americans need to lose weight. In the 1960s,
    obesity was an epidemic today, its a pandemic

39
The Facts
  • Obesity is a major cause of premature death. The
    damage is evident in all age groups and with all
    degrees of overweight, but the toll is heaviest
    in the heaviest people, and obesity has a greater
    impact the earlier it occurs. For example, a very
    obese 25-year-old man can expect to lose 13 years
    of life 22 of his life expectancy due to
    obesity. A 40-year-old man who is simply
    overweight may lose more than three years of
    life, but a 40-year-old man who is obese may lose
    nearly six years. All in all, obesity and lack of
    exercise are responsible for about 1,000 deaths
    in the United States every day. And if present
    trends continue, obesity will soon overtake
    smoking as the leading preventable cause of death
    in America (it is already responsible for a
    poorer overall health-related quality of life
    than smoking).

40
Obesity as a function of calories
  • A 2004 study proved the proposition Americans
    are eating more. Researchers at the Centers for
    Disease Control and Prevention evaluated the
    caloric consumption of average Americans between
    1971 and 2000. For men, the average daily
    consumption increased from 2,450 to 2,618
    calories. Thats a jump of 168 calories a day. It
    may not seem like much, but over the course of a
    year it will add 17 pounds and the news is even
    worse for women, who added 335 calories a day
    over the 30-year span.

41
Other Causes of Obesity
  • Some illnesses may lead to or are associated
    with weight gain or obesity. These include
  • Hypothyroidism, a condition in which the thyroid
    gland fails to produce enough thyroid hormone. It
    often results in lowered metabolic rate and loss
    of vigor.
  • Cushing's syndrome, a hormonal disorder caused by
    prolonged exposure of the body's tissues to high
    levels of the hormone cortisol. Symptoms vary,
    but most people have upper body obesity, rounded
    face, increased fat around the neck, and thinning
    arms and legs.
  • Polycystic ovary syndrome, a condition
    characterized by high levels of androgens (male
    hormone), irregular or missed menstrual cycles,
    and in some cases, multiple small cysts in the
    ovaries. Cysts are fluid-filled sacs.

42
Discrimination
  • In concordance with a number of other societal
    factors, Brownell claims the media has managed to
    create a relatively limited and notorious
    stereotype of the obese person lazy, unmotivated
    and uncontrolled. On the contrary, according to
    tolerance.org, their attractive and slimmer
    counterparts evoke feelings of skill, popularity,
    intelligence and happiness. The message the media
    sends is clear thin is good, fat is bad.
  • Weight discrimination is one of the leading
    prejudices in our society the emotional and
    psychological effects of this can lead to
    continued eating and depression.
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