How Coaches Inspire Eating
Disorders
Performance Pressures
HealthyPlace.com Audio
Eating
Disorders on College Campus'
Experts and a student who had an eating disorder in her 1st year at university all join in to discuss what students can do to help themselves - and what support friends and family can offer.
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Eating disorders spread through the culture because of
social pressure
from many sources. But for
young women who play sports, the chief agent in
transmitting the disease may very well be their boss--the coach. Athletes
are six times more likely to develop eating disorders than are other women,
reports Virginia Overdorf, Ed.D., a professor of movement science at William
Paterson College in Wayne, New Jersey. She believes that coaches unwittingly
contribute to the problem by extolling the virtues of weight loss to improve
performance.
Athletes commonly consume as few as 600 calories a day--but spend far
more on strenuous exercise. This not only leaves them with too little energy
to perform well, it endangers their bodies.
Ovendorf plans to give coaches in four school systems self-rating surveys
and quizzes to find out how much they know about eating disorders. Or
rather, how much they don't know. The goal: a model program of workshops to
teach coaches how to spot and improve poor eating patterns.
Overdorf plans to kick off the workshops this spring. She wants coaches
to know that taking on eating disorders in athletes is a team effort, that
professional counseling is needed for the
underlying psychological disorder,
and that
parents need to be made aware of the problem.
Hopefully, by the end of her spring training, she'll have the coaches on
the right track.
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