Eating Disorders

Eating Disorders: Beyond Dieting — What They Actually Are and Who They Affect

Eating disorders are routinely dismissed as extreme dieting or a phase — a misunderstanding that keeps people from getting help for years. A clinical guide to what these illnesses actually are, and who they really affect.

By Dr. Varun Gupta 11 min read Psychiatrist, Jammu
Written By Dr. Varun Gupta, MBBS, MD Psychiatry
Medically Reviewed By Dr. Varun Gupta, MD Psychiatry — Clinical & Editorial Review
Last Updated / Reviewed July 2026

Of everything I treat, eating disorders are among the most misunderstood — both by the public and, often, by the people living with one. Patients frequently tell me they didn't think their eating was "bad enough" to be a real problem, because they didn't match the image of an eating disorder they'd absorbed from media.

That image is wrong in almost every respect. This article covers what eating disorders actually are, who they affect, and what treatment that works actually involves.

What Counts as an Eating Disorder?

An eating disorder is a serious psychiatric illness involving severe disturbance in eating behaviour, body image, or control around food — not a diet, a phase, or a lifestyle choice.

Eating disorders are serious illnesses marked by severe disturbances to a person's eating behaviours, often accompanied by fixation on weight, shape, and control over food intake.[2] The three most common presentations are:

These are described consistently across major clinical sources, including the National Institute of Mental Health.[2]

Clinical Insight

The patients who worry me most are often the ones who look "fine." Weight is one of the least reliable signs of how serious an eating disorder has become — I've seen medically dangerous cases in people whose weight never raised a flag to anyone around them.

Who Do Eating Disorders Actually Affect?

Eating disorders affect people of every gender, age, body size, race and income level — the stereotype of a young, thin, affluent woman causes real harm by delaying diagnosis in everyone who doesn't fit it.

An estimated 9% of the population will experience an eating disorder during their lifetime.[1] While these conditions remain more common among women and girls, men and boys make up a meaningful share of cases and are frequently underdiagnosed precisely because clinicians and family members are looking for a stereotype rather than the illness itself.

Eating disorders do not discriminate — they affect people of all ages, races, ethnicities and body sizes, and a person can be underweight, average weight, or overweight and still have a serious eating disorder.[3]

Preoccupation with Food Constant calorie-counting, rigid food rules, and body-checking behaviours. Changed Eating Patterns Skipping meals, eating in secret, or eating unusually large amounts at once. Physical Signs Fatigue, dizziness, hair or weight changes, and disrupted menstrual cycles. Withdrawal Around Meals Avoiding meals with others, anxiety around eating occasions, or social meals.
Fig. 1 — Four common categories of warning signs across eating disorders.

Why Are Eating Disorders So Dangerous?

Eating disorders carry serious medical risk and an increased risk of death by suicide, making them among the most dangerous conditions in psychiatry — not a lesser or "lifestyle" concern.

Eating disorders often involve serious medical complications that can cause permanent damage or death, and people with eating disorders also face an increased risk of dying by suicide.[3] This is precisely why "just eat" or "just stop" is never an adequate response — the illness has taken over regulatory systems in the body and brain that willpower alone cannot override.

Clinical Insight

Families often ask me how someone this intelligent and capable can't just choose to eat normally again. I explain that by the time an eating disorder is entrenched, it isn't a matter of choice in any simple sense — the brain's hunger, reward and threat systems have been recalibrated around the disordered behaviour, and unwinding that takes structured treatment, not willpower.

What Does Effective Treatment Involve?

Effective treatment combines medical monitoring, nutritional rehabilitation, and structured psychotherapy — often delivered by a coordinated team rather than any single provider alone.

Because eating disorders sit at the intersection of psychiatric and physical health, care is most effective when a psychiatrist, dietitian and, where needed, physician work together rather than treating any one piece in isolation.

"Recovery isn't about willpower — it's about rebuilding a relationship with food and your body that the illness took from you."
— Dr. Varun Gupta

Frequently Asked Questions

Do eating disorders only affect thin, young women?

No. Eating disorders affect people of every gender, age, body size, and background. Most people with an eating disorder are not visibly underweight, and men and boys make up a meaningful share of cases, though they're often underdiagnosed because of this stereotype.

Is an eating disorder just an extreme diet?

No. An eating disorder is a serious psychiatric illness involving a person's relationship with food, body image and control, with real medical risks — it is not a lifestyle choice or a diet taken too far.

Can eating disorders be treated successfully?

Yes. With a combination of medical monitoring, nutritional rehabilitation and structured psychotherapy, many people recover fully, especially when treatment starts early.

References

  1. National Institute of Mental Health. Eating Disorders — Statistics. nimh.nih.gov/health/statistics/eating-disorders
  2. National Institute of Mental Health. Eating Disorders: What You Need to Know. nimh.nih.gov/health/publications/eating-disorders
  3. National Institute of Mental Health. Let's Talk About Eating Disorders. nimh.nih.gov/health/publications/lets-talk-about-eating-disorders

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