Eating Disorders Prevention:
Parents Are the Key Players
Eating disorders are much easier to prevent
than to cure, and
parents are
in the best position to do that work. Most of your efforts will be carried
out in the context of the family, not in organized programs. Keep in mind at
all times that
what you do is a much more powerful message than what you
say.
Reject guilt. Most parents of
eating disordered children are good
people who have done the best they knew how to do as they raised their kids.
In spite of their efforts, their children fell into
anorexia, bulimia, or
another disorder. Science is telling us that genetic factors that determine
personality have more influence than previously suspected in the development
of eating disorders. Those factors seem to be activated when a vulnerable
person begins to diet, buying into the belief that losing weight will
somehow make life happier.
At that point parents tend to fall into guilt and denial. Neither is
helpful. Instead of bemoaning what you did or didn't do (which may or may
not have contributed to the current problem), take action and arrange an
evaluation with your child's physician and a mental health specialist. The
sooner treatment is begun, the easier it will be to turn matters around. The
longer the symptoms are ignored, and the longer parents hope the behaviors
are "just a phase," the harder the road to recovery will be.
HealthyPlace.com Audio
Students
and Stress
When you
think about the past, high school and college probably seems
like a time when life was more about play than work. But
today's adolescents and college students experience very
high levels of stress and stress-related disorders. A survey
done at the University of Pennsylvania lists the top
concerns of students as stress, body image, substance abuse,
mental health and sleep difficulties. Listen to this
discussion about stress with students at the University of
Pennsylvania.
Listen with
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We hope you read the following guidelines before the situation becomes
critical. Use the suggestions to create a healthy environment for the growth
of your child's self-esteem and to counter some of the destructive media
messages about body image flooding today's young people.
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Give your family and friends the gift of a
healthy role model. If you are a woman,
get comfortable with your own
body and enjoy it, no matter what its size and shape. Never criticize
your appearance. If you do, you teach others to be overly concerned
about externals and critical of their own bodies.
-
If you are a
man, never criticize anyone's
appearance, especially a woman or child's. Phrases like "thunder thighs"
and "bubble butt," even if they are meant in jest, can wound deeply and
puncture self-esteem. Remember that people are more than just bodies.
They all have talents, abilities, hopes, dreams, values, and goals --
just like you do. Treat them as you would like to be treated.
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Likewise, don't allow anyone in the family
to tease others about appearance. Even so-called playful teasing can
produce powerful negative consequences.
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Emphasize the importance of fit and
healthy bodies, not thin bodies. The goals should be health and fitness,
not thinness. They don't always go together.
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Praise your children for who they are,
their personal qualities, and what they do -- not how they look. A child
who feels unattractive but is told that s/he is good looking will feel
only anxiety, not improved self-esteem, and you will lose credibility in
her/his eyes.
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Especially important: Don't you diet.
Ever. In the first place, diets don't work. They also send a dangerous
and unrealistic message to kids about quick-fix solutions. Rather than
diet, stick to a healthy routine of nutritious eating and
fitness-promoting exercise.
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Important fact: three of the most powerful
risk factors for the development of an eating disorder are (1) a mother
who diets, (2) a sister who diets, and (3) friends who diet. In
addition, girls and women who diet severely are eighteen times more
likely to develop an eating disorder than non dieters. (ANAD newsletter,
summer 2001)
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Encourage healthy eating, not dieting.
There is a difference. Also, make eating tasty food OK. Demonizing
french fries and ice cream only makes them forbidden fruit (to mangle
the metaphor).
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Don't forbid certain foods. Don't define
some foods as "bad." Healthy eating has room for just about all foods in
moderation. In addition, learn what normal development and weight gain
look like. It's not what you see in magazines or on TV! Encourage
normal, healthy development in your children.
-
Make mealtime pleasant. Enjoy eating with
family and good friends. Treat your family to a special meal once a
week, at home or in a restaurant. Watching what you eat in the service
of health is fine, but obsessive attention to calories, fat grams, and
weight can set up a vulnerable person to fear food and the consequences
of eating. For too many folks, these preoccupations and expectations
lead to anorexia and bulimia.
-
HealthyPlace.com Video
Cutting Through the Diet Hype
Low-fat vs. low-carb. The battle lines are drawn. But
which is the best diet for losing weight? Learn how to
tell one diet from another and how to cut through the
hype.
View with
Real Player. |
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If a child is bound and determined to
diet, get a physician or registered dietitian involved to supervise the
effort. Doctors and dietitians can provide information about healthy
eating and weight levels that can counteract myths about "good" and
"bad" foods and realistic weight goals. In addition, if the diet gets
out of control, the resource person will already be available to
intervene.
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Help your children build and commit to an
active lifestyle. You don't have to spend major money on athletic club
memberships or promote organized sports, but encourage activities such
as biking, walking, and swimming that are pleasurable and can be done
every day. Physical fitness promotes healthy self-image.
-
Talk to your children about the normal
body changes expected at puberty. Sometimes kids interpret developing
female curves as "getting fat." Girls certainly need to know that normal
development is necessary for health in general and healthy childbearing
in particular. Boys need to hear the message too so they can rise above
the "no fat chicks" mentality so prevalent in adolescent male culture.
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Also talk to your children about the
unrealistic images they see in magazines, on TV, and in the movies. Tell
them that some models and actresses achieve their "look" by resorting to
plastic surgery and eating disorders. It's the truth. Point out how
advertisers prey on body image insecurities by sending vulnerable people
messages about the benefits of being thin -- and spending their money on
the advertisers' products. Being thin doesn't make one popular and
self-confident any more than smoking does, but the advertising
techniques for cigarettes and diet products are almost identical.
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Most important of all, show people --
don't waste your time telling them -- how you take care of yourself in
healthy, responsible ways. Demonstrate how a competent person takes
charge, solves problems, negotiates relationships, and builds a
satisfying life without resorting to
self-destructive behaviors. A
healthy role-model parent is a child's best protection against a whole
host of problems, including life-ruining eating disorders.
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