Family Members of the Eating Disordered Patient
continuedLiterature on
fathers and eating disorders is scarce.
Father Hunger by Margo Maine and "Daddy's Girl" a chapter in my
book
Your Dieting Daughter, both address this too little discussed but
important topic. See Appendix B for more information. Other issues in the
family structure involve how rigid or flexible the family is and the
effectiveness of members' overall communication skills. The therapist needs
to explore all the various kinds of communication that exist. Effective
teaching on how to communicate is very beneficial to all families.
Communication skills affect how families resolve their conflicts and who
sides with whom on what issues.
ADDRESSING ABUSE ISSUES
HealthyPlace.com Audio
Eating
Disorders and Sexual Abuse
What
about sexual abuse correlations? Woman shares her
observations along with response by expert at Columbia
Health Services.
Listen with
Real Player.
'No
Secrets, No Lies': Preventing Sex Abuse:
No
Secrets, No Lies by author and journalist Robin D. Stone
is a resource guide for families seeking to understand,
prevent and overcome childhood sexual abuse and its
devastating impact on adult survivors.
Listen with
Real Player.
How
Do I Look?
Do I
have an eating disorder? Does she? Does he? How thin is too
thin? Am I strong enough? How can I help a friend who's out
of control? What about sexual abuse correlations? Can
insurance cover eating disorders treatment? Experts and
audience members provide insight.
Listen with
Real Player. |
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Numerous studies have documented a correlation between eating disorders
and a history of physical and/or sexual abuse. Although one study by the
Rader Institute on
sexual abuse and eating disorder inpatients reported a
correlation of 80 percent, most research seems to indicate a much lower
rate. It is important to understand that the association is not a simple
cause-and-effect relationship.
Abuse does not cause an eating disorder but
can be one of many contributing factors. Both physical and sexual abuse are
boundary violations of the body, thus it makes sense that abused individuals
manifest both psychological and physical symptoms including problems with
eating, weight, and
body image.
Both therapist and family therapist should explore family histories by
asking very specific questions regarding any abuse. Individuals who are
abused are reluctant to reveal it or perhaps have no recollection of the
abuse. Perpetrators of the abuse are, of course, reluctant to admit it.
Therefore, therapists must be well trained and experienced in these matters,
paying heed to signs and symptoms of possible abuse that need further
exploration.
CHALLENGING CURRENT PATTERNS
Whatever is going on, family members will usually at least agree that
what they are presently doing is not working. Coming for help means they
haven't been able to solve the problem on their own. If they have not
already tried several solutions, they at least agree that something in the
family is not working correctly and they can't or don't know how to fix it.
Usually the family is trying to do all the things they are sure will help
because they have helped before in other circumstances. Many of the standard
approaches used with other problems or with other children are inappropriate
and simply don't work with the eating disordered child. Grounding,
threatening, taking away privileges, rewarding, and so on will not resolve
an eating disorder. Taking the eating disordered patient to the family
doctor and having all the
medical consequences explained to her doesn't work
either, nor will planning a diet or guarding the bathroom.
Parents usually have a hard time stopping their own monitoring,
punishing, rewarding, and other controlling behaviors in which they are
engaging to try to stop the eating disorder even though those methods don't
seem to be doing any good. Often many of the methods used to prevent
behaviors actually serve to sustain them. Examples of this are: Father yells
and screams about the daughter's eating disorder ruining the family, and the
daughter's reaction is to go and throw up. The more control a mother exerts
over her daughter's life, the more control the daughter exerts with her
eating disorder. The more demands for weight gain are made, the thinner the
individual gets. If yelling, grounding, threatening, or other punishments
worked to control an eating disorder, that would be different—but they don't
work, and so there is no use in continuing them.
One night early in my career as an eating disorder therapist, I was in a
family session when this useful analogy came to me. The father of Candy, a
sixteen-year-old anorexic, was attacking her about being anorexic, harassing
her, and demanding that she "stop it." The attacks had been going on for
weeks prior to their seeking therapy. It was clear that the more attacking
the father did, the worse Candy got. The attacking provided distraction for
her; thus, she didn't have to face or deal with the real underlying
psychological issues that were at the root of her eating disorder. Most of
our sessions dealt with the combat that was going on with her father and her
mother's ineffectiveness. We were spending most of our time repairing damage
that resulted from her parents' attacks concerning what their daughter was
or wasn't eating, how much she weighed, why she was doing so and so, and how
she was harming the family. Some of these arguments at home ended up in
hair-pulling or slapping sessions.
The family was falling apart, and, in fact, the more Candy argued with
her parents, the more entrenched she became in her disorder. It was clear
from watching Candy that the more she had to defend her position, the more
she believed in it herself. It was clear that while being attacked by
others, she was distracted from the real issues and had no time to really go
inside herself and "clean house" or, in other words, really look inside and
deal with her problems. In the middle of more complaints by Candy's father,
I thought of the analogy and I said, "While you are guarding the fort, you
don't have time to clean house," and then I explained what I meant.
It is important to leave the individual with an eating disorder free from
any outside attacks. If the person is too busy guarding themselves against
outside intrusion, they will have too much distraction and spend no time
going inside themselves and really looking at and working on their own
issues. Who has time to work on themselves if they are busy fighting off
others? This analogy helped Candy's father see how his behavior was actually
making things worse and helped Candy be able to look at her own problem.
Candy's father learned a valuable lesson and went on to share this with
other parents in a multifamily group.
MULTIFAMILY GROUP
A variation on family therapy involves several families/significant
others who have a loved one with an eating disorder meeting together in one
large group called a multifamily group. It is a valuable experience for
loved ones to see how other people deal with various situations and
feelings. It is good for parents, and often less threatening, to listen to
and communicate with a daughter or son from another family. It is sometimes
easier to listen, be sympathetic, and truly understand when hearing someone
else's daughter or son describe problems with eating, fear of weight gain,
or what helps versus what sabotages recovery. Patients also can often listen
better to what other parents or significant others have to say because they
feel too angry or threatened and many times shut out those close to them.
Furthermore, siblings can talk to siblings, fathers to other fathers,
spouses to other spouses, improving communication and understanding as well
as getting support for themselves. Multifamily group needs a skilled
therapist and perhaps even two therapists. It's rare to find this
challenging but very rewarding type of group in settings other than formal
treatment programs. It might prove very useful if more therapists would add
this component to their outpatient services.
Family therapists must be careful that no one feels overly blamed.
Parents at times feel threatened and annoyed that they are having to change
when it is their daughter or son who is "sick and has the problem." Even if
family members refuse, are unable, or it is contraindicated for them to
attend sessions, family therapy can still occur without them present.
Therapists can explore all the various family issues, discover the family
roles in the illness, and change family dynamics when working solely with
the eating disordered patient. However, when the patient still lives at
home, it is essential to have the family come to sessions unless the family
is so nonsupportive, hostile, or emotionally troubled as to be
counterproductive. In this case, individual therapy and possibly group
therapy may very well be enough. In some cases, other arrangements can be
made for the family members to get therapy elsewhere. It may be better if
the patient has her own individual therapist and some other therapist does
the family work.
Treatment for eating disorders, including
family therapy, is not a
short-term process. There are no magic cures or strategies. Termination of
treatment can occur at different times for different family subsystems. When
the patient and the entire family are functioning effectively, follow-up
sessions are often helpful in assisting family members to experience their
own resources in dealing with stresses and transitions. Ultimately, the goal
is to create an environment in which the eating disorder behavior is no
longer necessary.
It should be noted that although family involvement in the treatment of
those with eating disorders, particularly young people, is considered vital,
it is not sufficient by itself to produce lasting changes in family members
or a lasting cure. Neither will the absence of family involvement doom the
eating disordered individual to a lifelong illness. In some instances,
family members and loved ones may not be interested in participating in
family therapy or their involvement may cause more unnecessary or
unresolvable problems than if they were not involved. It is not uncommon to
find family members or loved ones who feel that the problem belongs solely
to the person with the eating disorder and that, as soon as she is "fixed"
and back to normal, things will be fine. In some cases the removal of the
eating disordered person from her family or loved ones is the indicated
treatment, rather than including the significant others in the therapy
process. Each therapist will have to assess the patient and the family and
determine the best, most effective way to proceed.
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