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This Sample test is for your own personal assessment, and is identical to the CEUS test. You may take the test and receive results. However, you will not be given credit until completing the CEUS Test. There is no charge for taking the CEUS test. After passing the CEUS test, you may pay to receive a certificate of completion. Any post-test that you have passed will be listed on your Member Account page.

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35 questions have been provided. You must answer 80% correctly to pass.

 

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Eating Disorders
1)

Eating disorders are best defined as:

 
Lifestyle Choices Made-up illnesses Biologically influenced medical illnesses A vice to maintain shape
 
2)

Eating Disorders can affect

 
Women Only People of all ages, backgrounds, body weights, and genders Men Only Members of LGBTQ Community Only
 
3)

Common types of eating disorders include:

 
Anorexia Nervosa, Bulimia Nervosa and Binge-Eating Disorders Diabulimia OSFED only Orthorexia
 
4)

The Two Subtypes of Anorexia Nervosa are:

 
Orthorexia and OSFED Bulimia and ORFID Restrictive and Binge-Purge Emotional Eating and Orthorexia
 
5)

Bulimia Nervosa is defined as:

 
Controlled dieting Repeated episodes of overeating with loss of control Excessive exercise Healthy eating
 
6)

Binge-eating disorder is always followed by purging.

 
True False
 
7)

Treatment plans for eating disorders may include:

 
Healthy diet only Individual therapy only CBT only Psychotherapy, medical care, nutrition counseling, medication
 
8)

Anorexia Nervosa is defined as

 
Mere dieting Simple exercise Healthy eating Severe weight loss through starvation, overexercise, or purging
 
9)

Purging symptoms of anorexia nervosa include:

 
Healthy living Balanced diet Excessive eating Vomiting, diet pills, laxatives, compulsive exercise
 
10)

The causes of Anorexia Nervosa arises from

 
Peer Pressure only Body Dissatisfaction only Appetite loss only Social, emotional, and biological factors combined
 
11)

Binge Eating Disorder is defined as

 
Excessive dieting Healthy eating habits Purging after meals Eating large amounts with distress and loss of control
 
12)

Factors contributing to binge-eating disorder include:

 
Cultural factors only Psychological factors only Biological factors only Social, cultural, psychological, and biological factors
 
13)

Which of the following is NOT a helpful tip for someone with binge-eating disorder?

 
Telling them to get over it Encouraging professional help Being supportive Setting a good example
 
14)

Risk factors for bulimia nervosa include:

 
High self-esteem and positive body image Poor body image, low self-esteem, trauma history Healthy diet and outlook Excessive exercise alone
 
15)

Pica involves eating:

 
Vegetables Only Meat Only Non-food items like dirt, hair, paint chips Healthy Foods
 
16)

Risk factors for pica include:

 
Poor body image Mental health conditions like intellectual disability or schizophrenia low self-esteem Stressful life changes
 
17)

Orthorexia Nervosa is defined as

 
High self-esteem and healthy food habits Starving and overexercising Damaging obsession with pure or “righteous” eating Excessive use of diuretics
 
18)

Orthorexia Nervosa and Anorexia Nervosa are the same

 
True False
 
19)

Rumination Disorder is defined as

 
Regurgitating food, re-chewing, and swallowing or spitting out Binge eating with distress Severe weight loss through purging Poor self-image and low self-esteem
 
20)

Laxative Abuse is defined as

 
Effective weight control Overeating Overexercise Frequent laxative use to eliminate calories or feel thin
 
21)

Emotional eating means:

 
Using food to satisfy emotional needs, not hunger Starving yourself Eating healthy Food d.Building healthy relationship with food
 
22)

Common causes of emotional eating include:

 
Bullying Stress only Peer pressure Stress, boredom, habits, emptiness, social influences
 
23)

OSFED (Other Specified Feeding or Eating Disorder) is:

 
A serious, life-threatening, and treatable eating disorder A harmless diet pattern Mild food restriction A weight control method
 
24)

Examples of OSFED include:

 
Emotional eating disorder Restrictive dieting Excessive exercise Atypical anorexia, purging disorder, night eating syndrome
 
25)

ARFID (Avoidant/Restrictive Food Intake Disorder) is:

 
A method of weight control Overeating Restriction without body image concerns (unlike anorexia) A disorder centered on body image
 
26)

Co-occurring disorders with eating disorders often include:

 
Hopelessness Depression, anxiety, OCD Tension Low energy
 
27)

Diabulimia is defined as:

 
An eating disorder with anxiety Disorder in emotionally stable people Disorder in women only Diabetes patients restricting insulin to lose weight
 
28)

Long-term consequences of diabulimia include:

 
Menstrual Disruption Dehydration Yeast Infections Kidney, liver, and heart disease
 
29)

Drunkorexia refers to:

 
Skipping food to offset alcohol calories or increase intoxication Building motivation to change Using empathy instead of power Resistance to treatment
 
30)

PTSD is defined as

 
A mental health condition after exposure to traumatic events Overeating disorder Overexercise disorder Purging disorder
 
31)

The five Stages of Change are

 
Denial, anger, bargaining, depression, and acceptance, Forming, storming, norming, performing, adjourning Acceptance, storming, depression, anger and performing Pre-contemplation contemplation, preparation, action,maintenance.
 
32)

A possible sixth stage of recovery is

 
Anxiety PTSD Termination and relapse prevention Depression
 
33)

Risk factors for athletes include:

 
Weight requirements or pressure for muscularity Indigestion Support systems Healthy food relationships
 
34)

Weight stigma is:

 
Acceptance of eating disorders Weight bias or discrimination that increases body dissatisfaction Anti-bullying measures Supportive communities
 
35)

Psychological risk factors for eating disorders include

 
Perfectionism and inflexibility Body image dissatisfaction History of anxiety disorders All of the above