Eating Disorder Test

This survey is designed to gather information in significant areas of your life. This information is very important in helping to determine whatestt level of care is appropriate for your needs. Your honesty in answering these questions is a significant step in beginning the process of recovery.

After filling out the survey you will receive a score immediately and recommendations based upon your score.

We want you to know regardless of how high your score is, There is Hope! After taking this evaluation survey you will also be able to e-mail The Center your score to receive feedback from The Center including suggestions on how to obtain help to overcome an Eating Disorder.

For yourself or someone you know, rate the following questions: Take the Test

What is an Eating Disorder?

Eating Disorders are serious emotional and physical problems that can have life-threatening consequences for females and males.

Eating Disorders — such as anorexia, bulimia, and binge eating disorder — include extreme emotions, attitudes, and behaviors surrounding weight and food issues.

What is an eating disorder, and how do you know if you or a loved one needs eating disorder treatment?anorexia

Diet for Gout

Following a gout diet can help you limit your body’s uric acid production and increase its elimination. It’s not likely to lower the uric acid concentration in your blood enough to treat your gout without medication, but it may help decrease the number of attacks and limit their severity. Following the gout diet and limiting your calories — particularly if you also add in moderate daily exercise, such as brisk walking — also can improve your overall health by helping you achieve and maintain a healthy weight.

 

More diet information

Nutritional Therapies for Mental Disorders

According to the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, 4 out of the 10 leading causes of disability in the US and other developed countries are mental disorders. Major depression, bipolar disorder, schizophrenia, and obsessive compulsive disorder (OCD) are among the most common mental disorders that currently plague numerous countries and have varying incidence rates from 26 percent in America to 4 percent in China. Though some of this difference may be attributable to the manner in which individual healthcare providers diagnose mental disorders, this noticeable distribution can be also explained by studies which show that a lack of certain dietary nutrients contribute to the development of mental disorders.

Diet for COPD

Nutritional Guidelines for Managing COPD

This article provides basic information to help you make healthy food choices. Planning what you eat Th_05.bmpbe61cc4e-9c9c-41d9-bcbc-40a4efa5cc36Largeand balancing your meals are important ways to manage your health. Eating healthy often means making changes in your current eating habits. Changing your eating habits will not cure COPD, but it can help you feel better. A registered dietitian can provide in-depth nutrition guidance, tailor this educational information to meet your needs, and help you create and follow a personal action plan.

Raising Diabetes Awareness

November is Diabetes Awareness Month, a time to rally individuals, communities and families to Join the MillionsSM in the movement to Stop Diabetes®. This year, the American Diabetes Association is asking individuals to take a pledge and raise their hand to Stop Diabetes.

World Diabetes Day (November 14th) raises global awareness of diabetes – its escalating rates around the world and how to prevent the illness in most cases.

The Chronic Disease Control Branch mission is to prevent and control chronic diseases. The branch supports evidence-based programs to promote healthy behaviors, conduct research, and improve prevention, diagnosis, and treatment of chronic disease. Critical to the success of these efforts are partnerships with local public health and education agencies, voluntary associations, private organizations, and federal agencies.

Diabetic Equipment & Supplies

BD Safe-Clip™ Device

The BD Safe-Clip™ Needle Clipping & Storage Device removes insulin syringe needles and pen needles safely and easily.

This portable device holds up to 1,500 clipped needles, approximately a 2-year supply.

The BD Safe-Clip™ Device makes the syringe unusable by clipping off the needle.

Coalition for Safe Community Needle Disposalsyringe_disposal

1-800-643-1643

Established in August 2002, the Coalition for Safe Community Needle Disposal is a collaboration of businesses, community groups, non-profit organizations and government that promotes public awareness and solutions for safe disposal of needles, syringes, and other sharps in the community.

Gastroparesis

Gastroparesis, also called delayed gastric emptying, is a disorder in which the stomach takes too long to empty its contents. Normally, the stomach contracts to move food down into the small intestine for digestion. The vagus nerve controls the movement of food from the stomach through the digestive tract. Gastroparesis occurs when the vagus nerve is damaged and the muscles of the stomach and intestines do not work normally. Food then moves slowly or stops moving through the digestive tract.

Dietary Changes

Changing your eating habits can help control gastroparesis. Your doctor or dietitian may prescribe six small meals a day instead of three large ones. If less food enters the stomach each time you eat, it may not become overly full. In more severe cases, a liquid or pureed diet may be prescribed.

The doctor may recommend that you avoid high-fat and high-fiber foods. Fat naturally slows digestion—a problem you do not need if you have gastroparesis—and fiber is difficult to digest. Some high-fiber foods like oranges and broccoli contain material that cannot be digested. Avoid these foods because the indigestible part will remain in the stomach too long and possibly form bezoars.

A dietitian might suggest that you try to:TONY

  • Eat smaller meals more frequently.
  • Eat low-fiber forms of high-fiber foods, such as well-cooked fruits and vegetables rather than raw fruits and vegetables.
  • Choose mostly low-fat foods, but if you can tolerate them, add small servings of fatty foods to your diet.
  • Avoid fibrous fruits and vegetables, such as oranges and broccoli, that are likely to cause bezoars.
  • If liquids are easier for you to ingest, try soups and pureed foods.
  • Drink water throughout each meal.
  • Try gentle exercise after you eat, such as going for a walk.
  • Find other natural remedies that may help.

Implanting an electrical device to control the stomach muscles.

Electrical gastric stimulation uses an electric current to cause stomach contractions. Working much like a heart pacemaker, this stomach pacemaker, consisting of a tiny generator and two electrodes, is placed in a pocket that surgeons create on the stomach’s outer edge. Stomach pacemakers have been shown to improve stomach emptying and reduce nausea and vomiting in some people with gastroparesis.

Connecting with others.