Eating disorders — 5% of Korean 10s~20s women, anorexia nervosa, bulimia nervosa, binge eating disorder — psychiatry's highest mortality, integrated treatment

Eating disorders — 5% of Korean 10s~20s women, anorexia nervosa, bulimia nervosa, binge eating disorder — psychiatry's highest mortality, integrated treatment

Eating disorders = anorexia nervosa (AN), bulimia nervosa (BN), binge eating disorder (BED). Prevalence ~5% in Korean 10s~20s women (appearance / beauty society). AN mortality 5~10% — highest of psychiatric disorders. Direct causes are physical complications (cardiac, osteoporosis, electrolytes). Early detection + integrated treatment (psychiatry + nutrition + medical + family) is key. Recovery rates: AN 50%, BN 70%, BED 80%. Suicidal thoughts → 1577-0199.

TL;DR

Eating disorders = AN, BN, BED. 5% of Korean 10s~20s women, rising. AN mortality 5~10% (psychiatry's highest). Direct cause: physical complications. "Not willpower — a brain disease". Early treatment (within 1~3 years) ↑ recovery. Integrated = psychiatry + dietitian + internal medicine + family therapy. Hospitalize AN when BMI <16, electrolyte abnormalities, or cardiac findings. Suicide risk 5× general. 1577-0199.

What eating disorders are

Eating disorders = mental illnesses with abnormal behaviors, cognitions, and emotions around food / weight as the core. DSM-5's 3 main diagnoses:

  • Anorexia Nervosa (AN): ↓ weight, fear of weight gain, distorted body image
  • Bulimia Nervosa (BN): binges + compensatory behaviors (vomiting, exercise, fasting)
  • Binge Eating Disorder (BED): binges without compensation. Newly added to DSM-5 in 2013

Korean eating-disorder data

  • Overall: ~1% (adults), 5% in adolescent / young-adult women
  • Female:Male: 10:1 (AN, BN), 3:1 (BED)
  • Onset: peak 12~25 years
  • AN mortality: 5~10% (highest of psychiatric disorders — 20% suicide, 80% somatic)
  • BN mortality: 2~3%
  • BED mortality: indirectly ↑ via obesity complications
  • Korean specifics: appearance society, idol thinness, idol diets, SNS comparison, plastic-surgery ads accelerate onset

1. Anorexia Nervosa (AN)

DSM-5 criteria:

  • ① Weight below normal (BMI <18.5 or adolescent norms)
  • ② Intense fear of weight gain (even when underweight)
  • ③ Distorted weight / body image ("fat" while actually thin)

Two subtypes:

  • Restricting: food restriction only
  • Binge/Purge: binges followed by vomiting / exercise / diuretics

Somatic complications:

  • Cardiac: arrhythmia, heart failure (#1 AN death)
  • Osteoporosis: lifelong impact if adolescent onset
  • Electrolytes: low K, low Na (with vomiting)
  • Hormonal: amenorrhea, ↓ thyroid, ↑ cortisol
  • Brain atrophy (reversible but ↓ cognition)
  • Tooth erosion (vomiting)
  • Hair loss, skin, muscle atrophy

2. Bulimia Nervosa (BN)

DSM-5 criteria:

  • ① Binge eating (short time + large amount + sense of loss of control)
  • ② Compensatory behaviors (vomiting, laxatives, fasting, excessive exercise)
  • ③ At least weekly × 3+ months
  • ④ Self-image determined by weight / shape

Features: unlike AN, weight may be normal — invisible externally. "Fake normal". Cycle of binge → guilt → vomiting → self-loathing.

Somatic complications:

  • Electrolytes (low K endangers the heart)
  • Teeth (enamel erosion from gastric acid)
  • Esophagitis / esophageal rupture (emergency)
  • Parotid swelling (vomiting)
  • GI problems

3. Binge Eating Disorder (BED)

DSM-5 criteria (added 2013):

  • ① Binge eating (same as BN)
  • ② No compensation
  • ③ Weekly × 3+ months
  • ④ Guilt / depression about the binges
  • ⑤ 3+ of the following 5:
    • Eating very fast
    • Eating until uncomfortable
    • Eating large amounts when not hungry
    • Eating alone (shame)
    • Guilt / depression after

Features: most common eating disorder (50% of cases). Can co-occur with obesity — but not all obesity = BED. Strong self-loathing / depression.

Why it develops — 5 factors

① Genetics: first-degree relative with ED = 10× risk. 50~80% heritability.

② Brain circuits: reward circuit, serotonin, dopamine abnormalities.

③ Psychology: perfectionism, low self-esteem, control needs, trauma (sexual abuse 30%).

④ Sociocultural: Korean glorification of thinness, appearance society, SNS, celebrities, diet culture.

⑤ Triggers: dieting (75% develop ED after a diet), breakup, exams, bullying.

Not willpower, not vanity — a brain disease. Telling an ED patient to "just eat" is like telling a depressed patient to "just feel better".

Korean adolescent warning signs — for parents

  • Refusing meals / lying "I ate"
  • Rapid weight loss (5+ kg in 3 months)
  • Bathroom right after meals (possible vomiting)
  • Diet / exercise compulsions
  • Avoiding talk of looks / weight
  • Amenorrhea
  • Hair loss, skin issues, cold extremities
  • Avoiding friends / family, depression
  • Baggy clothes (hiding weight loss)
  • "Micro-controlling" food (calorie counting, weighing oneself)

2+ signs = psychiatry immediately. Faster treatment = ↑ recovery.

Integrated treatment — 5 axes

① Psychiatry / psychotherapy:

  • CBT-E: first-line for BN / BED. 20 sessions.
  • FBT (Family-Based Treatment, Maudsley): first-line for adolescent AN. Parents regain food-control role.
  • DBT: when BPD co-occurs.
  • Medication: SSRI (BN, BED) — AN responds weakly to meds.

② Nutritional rehabilitation:

  • Dietitian-supervised meal plan
  • Gradual ↑ calories (refeeding syndrome risk — slow at inpatient start)
  • Food journal / plan
  • Gradual exposure to "feared foods"

③ Internal medicine / physical care:

  • Electrolyte and ECG monitoring
  • Osteoporosis check (AN)
  • Teeth (BN)
  • Hormones (amenorrhea)

④ Family / environment:

  • Normalize family meal environment
  • ↓ looks / weight talk
  • ↓ SNS exposure
  • Family therapy

⑤ Inpatient vs. outpatient:

  • Inpatient criteria: BMI <16, electrolyte abnormalities, cardiac findings, suicide risk, outpatient failure
  • Inpatient duration: 4 weeks ~ 6 months
  • Outpatient: 1~3 multidisciplinary visits/week

Korean treatment resources

  • Specialty clinics: SNUH, Korea Univ., Samsung, Asan, Kangbuk Samsung psychiatry have ED clinics
  • ED-specialty hospitals: some specialty clinics (search "식이장애 치료")
  • Inpatient facilities: some general hospitals, adolescent psychiatric hospitals
  • Health insurance: covers psychiatric visits / drugs
  • Self-help groups: Korean ED recovery communities (online cafés)
  • Family education: F.E.A.S.T. (Korean chapter)

Recovery prospects

Recovery rates with treatment:

  • AN: 50% full / 30% partial / 20% chronic
  • BN: 70% full / 20% partial / 10% chronic
  • BED: 80% full
  • Without treatment: chronic, ↑ mortality risk

Factors that ↑ recovery: ① early treatment (within 3 years) ② family support ③ integrated treatment ④ comorbidity treatment ⑤ social support.

Recovery is not just "weight normalization" but "healthy relationship with food". Can take 5~10 years; relapse is common.

Emergency signs — care now

  • BMI <16 or ≥5 kg loss in 1 month
  • Syncope, severe dizziness
  • Palpitations, arrhythmia
  • Electrolyte abnormalities (blood tests)
  • Hematemesis after vomiting
  • Suicidal thoughts / attempts
  • Food refusal for 2+ weeks

1577-0199 or ER. Eating disorders can be emergencies — not "weak will", a medical emergency. If you notice it in your child, get specialty treatment immediately. "They'll grow out of it" is wrong — treatment determines the outcome.

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Frequently asked questions

Dieting vs. eating disorder — how to tell?

Core differences: ① control — dieting is controlled and stoppable; ED is loss of control ② goal — diet is health / aesthetics; ED is "only worthy of love if thin" identity ③ body — diet within normal; ED brings amenorrhea, cardiac, ↓ bone density ④ social — diet OK with friends; ED avoids ⑤ cognition — diet normal about food; ED is all-day food preoccupation. 75% of EDs start after a diet — "light dieting" is also risky.

Diagnosed as an adult — too late?

Not too late. Adolescent-onset cases often go undiagnosed and chronic into 20s~40s. Korea's "ED = teens" perception delays adult diagnosis. Adult treatment is also effective: ① CBT-E, DBT, psychiatric drugs ② voluntary hospitalization ③ workplace EAP. But chronic cases take longer to recover — 5~10 years. Never say "too old for treatment". Diagnosis / treatment happen even in 50s. Youth Mental Health Voucher up to 34; for adults, use Mental Health Welfare Centers.

My friend may have an eating disorder — how can I help?

5 steps: ① 1:1 safe space (not at a meal — walk, café) ② don't comment on looks / weight — say "I'm worried about you" ③ accurate observation ("you go to the bathroom right after meals") — no judgment ④ suggest "please get treatment" / offer to go with ⑤ tell family (minor) or, in an emergency, take adult friend directly to psychiatry. You're not responsible for the cure — your role is connecting them to professionals. Even if they deny, your outside view is the first step toward recovery. Share 1577-0199.

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