

Page 39
Notes:
conferenceseries
.com
Volume 19, Issue 2 (Suppl)
Int J Emerg Ment Health, an open access journal
ISSN: 1522-4821
Mental Health 2017
June 21-23, 2017
Mental Health and Human Resilience
June 21-23, 2017 London, UK
3
rd
International Conference on
Eating disorders-anorexia nervosa a deeper perspective from the sufferers’ eyes
Begum Engur
King’s College London, UK
A
norexia is, simply stated, starving yourself ’ to death. It comes from an obsessive fear and a desperate desire to maintain control
over that fear. The symptoms of anorexia nervosa include refusal to maintain the minimal normal body weight for corresponding
height, body type, age and activity level, intense fear of weight gain or being fat, feeling fat or overweight despite dramatic weight loss,
loss of menstrual periods in post pubescent women and girls. Along with excessive exercise, restrictive eating (or binge and purge
type) and extreme concern with body weight and shape. Every holiday it was always the same. Endless, insipid observations about her
appearance are how big she had become and how tall she was getting. Then last year that comment by her uncle, spoken in a whisper
when no one else was around, about howmuch weight she had gained. She shivered in disgust every time she thought of it. The author
was thinking about food or about what she had just eaten or what she was just about to get rid of every minute of every half hour of
every day. It was all consuming. That is the obsession of an eating disorder. It takes over your life; it took over my life. The cost has
been enormous. Waiting for the food to arrive is always the hardest part. The author was starving, because Ed never lets her to eat any
other meal on days that she goes out to eat. All she can think about is food. The author cannot pay attention in the conversation with
friends, she just nod her head in the right places. The main aim of this speech is to provide a deeper perspective into anorexia nervosa,
a very serious mental disorder having the highest mortality rate among females, instead of giving book/lecture-based descriptions
about what the disorder is.
Biography
Begum Engur has completed her BSc in Psychology in Istanbul with high honor and as an International Baccalaureate Scholarship student. During the
undergraduate years, she has served as a volunteer and did Internships in various CAMHS settings. In addition to the works, she has completed numerous
trainings, earned certificates from institutions worldwide in the same area of interest. She has completed her MSc in Child Adolescent Mental Health at King’s
College London, Institute of Psychiatry, Psychology and Neuroscience. During MSc, she has completed her clinical placement as a Trainee Psychologist at South
London and Maudsley NHS - Conduct, Adoption and Fostering Team; there she worked with adopted/fostered children having emotional, behavioral difficulties,
anxiety disorders, pervasive developmental disorders, attachment disorders, traumatic stress and got trained and worked on parenting intervention. Scholar’s
Press published some of her academic works in various international journals and her MSc dissertation as a book.
begumengur@hotmail.comBegum Engur, Int J Emerg Ment Health 2017, 19:2(Suppl)
DOI: 10.4172/1522-4821-C1-008