Family Members of the Eating Disordered Patient
For Family Members And Those Who Treat Them
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Individuals with
eating disorders directly or indirectly
affect those
with whom they live or who love and care about them. Family patterns of
socializing, preparing food, going out to restaurants, and just plain
talking to each other
are all disrupted
by an eating disorder. Everything from finances to
vacations seems jeopardized, and the person with the eating disorder is
often resented for an illness she cannot control.
A family member with an eating disorder is most likely not the only
member of the family with problems. It is common to find problems with
mood
or behavior control in other family members, and the level of functioning
and boundary setting among parents and siblings should be evaluated. In many
families there is a history of excessive reliance on external achievement as
an indicator of self-worth, which ultimately or repeatedly fails.
Fluctuations between overinvolvement and abandonment may have been occurring
for some time, leaving family members feeling lost, isolated, insecure, or
rebellious, and without a sense of self.
Parents, who have their own issues both from the past and in the present,
are often frustrated, fighting between themselves, and unhappy.
Overinvolvement with the eating disordered child is often a first reaction
in trying to gain control of an out-of-control situation. Futile attempts at
control are exerted at a time when understanding and supportive direction
would be more helpful.
In a marriage where one partner has an eating disorder, the spouse's
concerns are often overshadowed by anger and feelings of helplessness.
Spouses often report a decrease of intimacy in their relationships,
sometimes describing their loved ones as preferring or choosing the eating
disorder over them.
Individuals with eating disorders need help in communicating to their
family members and loved ones. Family members and loved ones need help as
they experience a variety of emotions, from denial and anger to panic or
despair. In the book, Eating Disorders: Nutrition Therapy in the Recovery
Process, by Dan and Kim Reiff, six stages that parents, spouses, and
siblings go through are delineated.
STAGES OF GROWTH EXPERIENCED BY FAMILY MEMBERS AFTER BECOMING AWARE THAT
A PERSON THEY LOVE HAS AN EATING DISORDER
Stage 1: Denial
Stage 2: Fear, ignorance, and panic
-
Why can't she stop?
-
What kind of treatment should he have?
-
The measure of recovery is behavior
change, isn't it?
-
How do I respond to her behaviors?
Stage 3: Increasing realization of the
psychological basis for the eating disorder
-
Family members question their
roles in the
development of the eating disorder.
-
There is increased understanding that the
process of recovery takes time and that there is no quick fix.
-
Parents/spouses are increasingly involved
in therapy.
-
Appropriate responses to the food- and
weight-related behavior are learned.
Stage 4: Impatience/despair
-
HealthyPlace.com Audio
The
Psychology of Getting Better
Our guest, Susan, was sexually abused over 30 years ago.
She's been diagnosed with major depression, PTSD, OCD
and panic disorder and was hospitalized at least twice.
Susan's spent the last 10 years in therapy trying to
deal with what happened. Over that period of time, she's
changed meds, changed doctors, tried to journal, tried
meditation, tried keeping busy. At 45, she still can't
deal with the sadness. She, like many who suffer from
various psychological disorders, wants to know -- what's
it take to get better?
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Progress seems too slow.
-
The focus shifts from trying to change or
control the person with the eating disorder to working on oneself.
-
Parents/spouses need support.
-
Anger/detachment is felt.
-
Parents/spouses let go.
Stage 5: Hope
Stage 6: Acceptance/peace
To help family and friends understand, accept, and work through all the
problems a loved one with an eating disorder presents, successful treatment
of eating disorders often mandates therapeutic involvement with the
patient's significant others and/or family, even when the patient is no
longer living at home or a dependent.
Family therapy (this term will be used to include therapy with
significant others) involves the creation of a powerful therapeutic system
consisting of the family members plus the therapist. Family therapy
emphasizes responsibility, relationships, conflict resolution, individuation
(each person's developing an individual identity), and behavior change among
all family members. The therapist assumes an active and highly responsive
role within this system, altering the family rules and patterns in a
significant way. If the therapist appreciates the vulnerability, pain, and
sense of caring within the family, he can provide initial support for all
family members. Supportive, guided therapy can relieve some of the tension
created by tenuous and previously disappointing family relationships.
One goal in family therapy involves helping the family learn to do what
the therapist has been trained to do for the patient (i.e., empathize,
understand, guide without controlling, step in when necessary, foster
self-esteem, and facilitate independence). If the therapist can help the
family and significant others to provide for the patient what a healing
therapeutic relationship provides, the length of therapy may be reduced.
In doing family work, the patient's age and developmental status are
important in outlining the course of treatment as well as highlighting the
responsibility of family members. The younger the patient is, both
chronologically and developmentally, the more responsibility and control the
parents will have. On the other hand, patients who are developmentally more
advanced require parental involvement that is more collaborative and
supportive and less controlling.
SUMMARY OF IMPORTANT TASKS FOR SUCCESSFUL FAMILY THERAPY
The multidimensional task of the therapist in family therapy is
extensive. The therapist must work on correcting any dysfunction occurring
in the various relationships, for this may be where the underlying causal
issues have partly developed or at least are sustained. Family members,
spouses, and significant others need to be educated about eating disorders
and, particularly, the patient's unique manifestation of symptoms. All loved
ones need help in learning how to respond appropriately to various
situations they will encounter. Any serious conflicts between family
members, which contribute highly to the development or perpetuation of
eating disorder behaviors, must be addressed.
For example, one parent may be stricter than the other and have different
values, which may develop into serious confrontations over the raising of
the children. Parents may need to learn how to solve conflicts between
themselves and nurture each other, which will then enable them to better
nurture their child. Faulty organizational structure in the family, such as
too much intrusiveness on the part of the parents, too much rigidity, or
fused boundary issues, must be pointed out and corrected. Expectations of
family members and how they communicate and get their needs met may be
underhanded and/or destructive. Individual members of the family may have
problems that need to be resolved separately, such as depression or
alcoholism, and the family therapist should facilitate this happening. The
task of family therapy is so complex and at times overwhelming that
therapists often shy away from it, preferring to work solely with individual
patients. This can be a grave mistake. Whenever possible, family members
and/or significant others should be a part of overall treatment.
The following is an excerpt from a session where an
extremely upset
father was complaining about the fact that the family had to be in therapy.
He felt that there were no family problems except that his daughter, Carla,
was sick. Allowing this kind of thinking is detrimental. In fact, for teens
and younger patients, statistics show that family therapy is necessary for
recovery.
Father: Why should I listen to this? She is the one with this
disgusting sickness. She's the one
screwed up in the head. She's the one who
is wrong here.
Therapist: It is not a matter of right or wrong, or of blame. It is
not just something wrong with Carla's personality. Carla is suffering from
an illness that affects you and the rest of the family. Furthermore, there
may be certain things in her development that got in the way of her being
able to express her feelings or cope with stressful situations. Parents
can't be blamed for creating eating disordered children, but how a family
deals with feelings or anger or disappointment can have an effect on how
someone turns to an eating disorder.
Yelling and punishing Carla have not worked to help resolve her
problem, and in fact things have been getting worse. I need you all here if
Carla is to get better, and if all of you are to get along better. When you
try to force Carla to eat, she just finds a way to throw up afterward—so
what you're doing isn't working. Also, everyone is angry and frustrated. For
example, you disagree on things like curfew, dating, clothing, and even
going to church. If you want Carla to get better and not just follow your
rules, I need to help you find compromises.
pages: 1
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By Carolyn Costin, MA, M.Ed., MFCC - Medical
Reference from "The Eating Disorders Sourcebook"
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