What is binge eating disorder?
Binge eating disorder can have a negative impact on both your physical and mental health. There are signs that indicate someone might have binge eating disorder, as well as a number of ways to get help.
This can help if:
you eat large amounts of food in a short period of time
you’re worried about your food intake
you feel like you have to hide the amount of food you eat.
Characteristics
A unique characteristic of binge eating disorder is that the person eats large amounts of food in a short period of time and feels a sense of loss of control while eating. Most people overeat every now and then, and it’s not uncommon to feel occasionally that you’ve eaten more than you needed to. However, binge eating disorder is characterised by continuing to eat even when feeling uncomfortably full, on a regular basis, often alone and in secret, and is accompanied by a sense of shame and guilt. Bingeing often happens during times of stress, anger, boredom or distress, and is used as a way of coping with difficult emotions.
Common signs
Some of the common signs of binge eating disorder are:
feeling that your eating is out of control
eating what most people would consider to be a large amount of food on a regular basis
eating to the point of feeling uncomfortable
eating large amounts of food, even when you’re not really hungry
being secretive about what you eat and when
feeling embarrassed by the amount of food you’ve eaten
feeling disgusted, depressed or guilty about overeating.
What can I do now?
Make an appointment with your GP to have an overall health check and discuss options for support.
Get personalised support options for eating disorders with the ReachOut NextStep tool.
Check out our page on support services for eating disorders.
Read about self-help tools for eating disorders.