Thousands Of Middle-Aged Women 'Secretly Living With Eating Disorders' In The UK

Less than 30% of those suffering have sought help.

Thousands of middle-aged women in the UK are living with eating disorders, but the majority have not sought help or treatment, new research suggests.

The study of more than 5,000 women in their 40s and 50s found 3% had an active eating disorder in mid-life.

The researchers said the figure was surprisingly high, as eating disorders are primarily associated with adolescence or early adulthood.

The researchers have called for raised awareness about eating disorders affecting this age group and said it is imperative health professionals begin to understand their reasons for not coming forward.

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Around 15.3% of women in the study reported having an eating disorder at some point in their life and 3.6% reported an eating disorder in the past 12 months.

Less than 30% of women who had eating disorders said they had sought help or received treatment.

Dr Nadia Micali, lead author from University College London, said: “Our study shows that eating disorders are not just confined to earlier decades of life and that both chronic and new onset disorders are apparent in mid-life.

“Many of the women who took part in this study told us this was the first time they had ever spoken about their eating difficulties, so we need to understand why many women did not seek help.

“It may be that there are some barriers women perceive in healthcare access or a lack of awareness among healthcare professionals.”

The researchers also assessed factors that may be associated with the onset of an eating disorder including childhood happiness; parental divorce or separation; life events; relationship with parents; and sexual abuse.

Dr Micali explained: “The early risk factors we assessed were associated with different eating disorders.

“Anorexia, bulimia, binge eating and purging disorder were all associated with childhood unhappiness, and parental separation or divorce during childhood seemed to increase the risk of bulimia, binge eating disorder and atypical anorexia.

“We also found that death of a carer could increase the likelihood of purging disorder and that sexual abuse during childhood, or a fear of social rejection, was associated with all eating disorders.”

In this study a woman’s risk of suffering from anorexia nervosa or bulimia nervosa, two of the most common eating disorders in the UK, was increased by 4-10% per unit score of ‘unhappiness’ if they reported being unhappy during childhood. 

Higher interpersonal sensitivity – the ability to accurately assess others’ feelings - was associated with an increased risk of binge eating by 19% per unit score of ‘sensitivity’. A good mother–daughter relationship was associated with a 20% reduced chance of developing bulimia.

The researchers gathered their data using a previous University of Bristol study, where women answered a questionnaire on their past life experiences, including eating disorders.

The researchers of the latest study said more research is needed into the topic, as the University of Bristol study took a sample of women from one area of the UK, so the results may not be accurate for the whole country. 

They added that the data in this study covered the last 40 years and might reflect the past, rather than the current lack of clinical awareness of eating disorders in the UK.

8 Celebrities Get Real About Eating Disorders
Zayn Malik(01 of09)
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Zayn Malik is the most recent celebrity to open up about struggling with an eating disorder. In his autobiography, 'Zayn', the singer revealed he suffered from an eating disorder which would see him going without food for days on end.

“When I look back at images of myself from around November 2014, before the final tour, I can see how ill I was,” he says.

“I was suffering from an eating disorder. It wasn’t as though I had any concerns about my weight or anything like that, I’d just go for days – sometimes two or three days straight – without eating anything at all. It got quite serious, although at the time I didn’t recognise it for what it was.

"I think it was about control. I didn’t feel like I had control over anything else in my life, but food was something I could control, so I did."
(credit:Scott Dudelson via Getty Images)
(02 of09)
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Demi Lovato(03 of09)
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Demi Lovato has been vocal about her struggles with bulimia, which saw her checked into rehab in 2010, aged 18. Lovato said growing up around her mum, a former cheerleader, and her grandmother, both of whom battled bulimia, didn't make it easy.

"Being around somebody who was 80 pounds and had an active eating disorder...it's hard not to grow up like that," she told American Way.

The singer is now a body positive role model for many women. She has previously slammed the 'thigh gap' trend and now regularly posts health and fitness videos on Snapchat.
(credit:Noam Galai via Getty Images)
Jade Thirlwall, Little Mix(04 of09)
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Little Mix singer Jade Thirlwall spoke about her struggle with anorexia in the band's book, 'Our World'.

She said she developed the illness when she was 13, after going through a particularly difficult time in her personal life.

She wrote: “Anorexia is a self-destructive thing and you become stubborn, so when people are trying to tell you something you get it into your head that they’re against you and you’re not going to listen."

Revealing the extent of her illness, she added: “It took going to hospital to make me realise that it wasn’t a game, it was something really serious. They sat me down in the clinic and were quite tough at first, spelling it out: ‘You’re destroying your body and if you keep doing this you will die.’"

After this, she began to conquer her eating disorder with the help of therapy sessions and regular hospital visits.
(credit:Vianney Le Caer/Invision/AP)
Russell Brand(05 of09)
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Russell Brand revealed he started binge-eating and purging around the time he was 11. "It was really unusual in boys, quite embarrassing. But I found it euphoric," he said.

As an adult, the bulimia briefly returned and reflecting back, Brand believes it was "about getting out of myself and isolation, feeling inadequate and unpleasant".
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Kesha(06 of09)
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Kesha spoke about her battle with depression and an eating disorder, after being trolled about her body on Instagram.

Sharing a photo of herself with both middle fingers in the air on Instagram, she wrote: “I have been battling depression and an eating disorder for a while now.

“My career is in a strange place and it feels like I’m fighting an uphill fight some days. but I have decided to take my life back. my freedom. my happiness. my voice. my worth. I will not just fucking be quiet and hide."
(credit:John Shearer via Getty Images)
Lady Gaga(07 of09)
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The singer said she has struggled with bulimia and anorexia since she was 15.

She launched a sub-section on her site called 'The Body Revolution' to encourage her fans to love themselves and promote positive body image.
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Troian Bellisario, Pretty Little Liars(08 of09)
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Actress Troian Bellisario from 'Pretty Little Liars' said she suffered from anorexia and also self-harmed.

"It was about wanting to please my father and mother and wanting to be perfect to everybody," she told Seventeen. "I just thought if I ever expressed [to my parents] any sadness or anger or anything that’s going on with me, they would disown me. I kept a lot of it bottled up inside, and it turned into self-destructive behaviour.”

She added: "I felt this sadness, and I thought if people really knew what was going on inside me, they wouldn’t want to hang out with me. So I tried to keep it light and funny. I became imprisoned [by my eating disorder and self-harm]. And it was something I fought with."
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Claire Richards, Steps(09 of09)
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Steps star Claire Richards said she became so obsessed with her weight at the height of her band’s fame that she developed bulimia.

She said she would binge on food and then purge to please critics and fit into the pop star mould.

In her book, 'All Of Me', she wrote: “I was young, in the spotlight and under pressure - not only to perform but to look a certain way. Controlling your food intake gives you the sense you’re in control of life. I remember reading about anorexia when I was just 11. I didn’t know what anorexia was then, but I remembered the word and, years later, I was to understand only too well what it meant."
(credit:Dave Hogan via Getty Images)