Affinity Health, a leading provider of high-quality health cover, is shedding light on an often-overlooked health issue, eating disorders in midlife.
Midlife brings biological, emotional, and social changes that can increase the risk of disordered eating. Hormonal shifts during perimenopause and menopause, stress, body image concerns, and significant life transitions can all play a part. Many adults also turn to strict diets or “health resets” after pregnancy or illness, which can unintentionally lead to unhealthy eating habits.
Not Just a “Young Woman’s” Problem
Eating disorders don’t only affect teenagers or young women; they can occur at any age and in any gender. Research shows that about one in five women and one in seven men experience an eating disorder by the age of 40. The most common type in adults is binge eating disorder (BED), which affects around 2–3% of people and can cause severe emotional and physical distress.
Many adults in midlife live with eating disorders that go unnoticed or untreated.
For men, symptoms are often overlooked because disordered eating can appear as extreme “clean eating”, rigid gym routines, or an obsession with fitness rather than obvious distress about food or weight.
Health Risks You Can’t Ignore
Eating disorders are severe medical conditions, not lifestyle choices. Anorexia nervosa has one of the highest death rates of any mental illness, caused by heart problems, electrolyte imbalances, and even suicide. Bulimia nervosa can damage tooth enamel, irritate the throat, and cause heart issues due to low potassium levels. Binge eating disorder (BED) is linked to obesity, type 2 diabetes, fatty liver, sleep apnoea, and joint pain.
For people in midlife, these risks can be even greater. Hormonal changes and age-related bone loss make restrictive eating especially dangerous. Long work hours, caregiving stress, poor sleep, and using alcohol to cope can all worsen metabolic health and fuel unhealthy eating cycles.
How to Spot the Signs in Adults
Warning signs are often rationalised as “healthy habits”, which delays help-seeking. Look for:
- Rigid rules (“no carbs after 4 pm”, compulsive fasting windows, guilt after deviations).
- Frequent secretive eating or loss-of-control episodes, often at night or after stressful days.
- Compensation behaviours (excessive exercise, vomiting, laxative/diuretic misuse).
- Body image over-investment (worth tied to weight/shape; panic over minor fluctuations).
Medical flags: dizziness, fainting, cold intolerance, menstrual changes, dental problems, reflux, bloating, constipation, recurrent GI complaints, or unexplained lab abnormalities (e.g., low potassium levels).
Why Midlife Biology Matters
Oestrogen and progesterone modulate appetite signals, dopamine reward pathways and stress reactivity. During perimenopause, fluctuating oestrogen may heighten urges to binge or restrict in vulnerable individuals, while hot flushes, poor sleep and mood lability can further erode coping capacity. Screening for disordered eating during menopause care is increasingly recommended.
Evidence-based Treatment Works at Any Age
Adults recover, and starting now is better than waiting. Effective options include:
- Therapy: Talking therapies such as Cognitive Behavioural Therapy (CBT-E) and Interpersonal Therapy (IPT) are the main treatments for bulimia and binge eating disorder. Enhanced CBT can be adapted for people with mixed eating issues, while Dialectical Behaviour Therapy (DBT) is helpful for those who binge or purge in response to strong emotions.
- Medical and nutritional care: A GP and dietitian can stabilise medical risks (electrolytes, ECG, bone health), treat anaemia and GI issues, and rebuild flexible, adequate eating.
- Medication (case-by-case): Certain prescribed treatments may help reduce bingeing or purging behaviours, especially when combined with therapy. Always discuss options, benefits, and potential risks with a qualified healthcare professional.
- Address sleep, pain and mood: Treating problems such as poor sleep, ongoing pain, or low mood can help break the cycle that keeps eating disorders going.
- Support networks: Educating partners and family members helps recovery and reduces feelings of shame.
The Bottom Line
Eating disorders in midlife are real, common, and treatable. Hormonal changes, ongoing stress, and a culture focused on weight can trigger or worsen symptoms in both women and men. Binge eating disorder is prevalent among adults, while anorexia carries serious medical and emotional risks, making early care essential. Getting help is a sign of strength, not failure. Affinity Health offers confidential support through 24/7 telehealth GP consultations, managed doctor visits, and access to professionals who can guide treatment and recovery with compassion.
About Affinity Health
Affinity Health is South Africa’s leading health cover provider, offering you a range of options at affordable rates, including access to the widest national provider network. We understand the importance of having medical insurance that meets your needs, budget, and lifestyle. Our healthcare products are designed to protect you and your family when it matters the most. We strive to give our clients peace of mind and the highest standard of service. For more information, follow us on Facebook, Twitter, and Instagram.


























