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Eating
Disorders sending more Americans to the
Hospital
Newswise — The number of men and women
hospitalized due to eating disorders that
caused anemia, kidney failure, erratic heart
rhythms or other problems rose 18 percent
between 1999 and 2006, according to the
latest News and Numbers from the Agency for
Healthcare Research and Quality.
The federal agency’s analysis also found
that between 1999 and 2006:
Hospitalizations for eating disorders rose
most sharply for children under 12 years of
age – 119 percent.
The second steepest rise was for patients
ages 45 to 64 – 48 percent.
Hospitalizations for men also increased
sharply – by 37 percent – but women
continued to dominate hospitalizations for
eating disorders (89 percent in 2006).
Admissions for anorexia, the most common
eating disorder, remained relatively stable.
People with anorexia typically lose extreme
amounts of weight by not eating enough food,
over-exercising, self-inducing vomiting, or
using laxatives.
In contrast, hospitalizations for bulimia
declined 7 percent. Bulimia – binge eating
followed by purging by vomiting or use of
laxatives – can lead to severe dehydration
or stomach and intestinal problems.
Hospitalizations for less common eating
disorders increased 38 percent.
Those disorders include pica, an obsession
with eating non-edible substances such as
clay or plaster, and psychogenic vomiting,
which is vomiting caused by anxiety and
stress.
This AHRQ News and Numbers is based on data
in Hospitalizations for Eating Disorders
from 1999 to 2006
The report uses statistics from the 2006
Nationwide Inpatient Sample, a database of
hospital inpatient stays that is nationally
representative of inpatient stays in all
short-term, non-federal hospitals.
The data are drawn from hospitals that
comprise 90 percent of all discharges in the
United States and include all patients,
regardless of insurance type, as well as the
uninsured.
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