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Myths and Misconceptions About Eating Disorders
For Parents, Health Professionals, and Educators
The following are facts that will help you to prevent, address, or treat
eating disorders or dysfunctions in your
child, student, patient, or
loved
one.
Myths about healthy eating
-
Food is fattening.
-
Fat is unhealthy for the body.
-
Dieting and restricting food is the best
way to lose weight.
-
It's okay to skip meals.
-
Nobody eats breakfast.
-
Food substitutes such as Power Bars and
Slim Fast are okay to take the place of meals.
-
Meals are to be served, not eaten, by
parents.
-
Exercise can keep a person slim and fit.
You can never overdo a good thing.
-
Being fat is about being unhealthy,
unhappy and unattractive. It must be avoided at all costs. F
-
at-free eating is healthy for eating
disorders.
-
A meal is anything you put in your mouth
around mealtime.
Myths about eating disorders
-
Once
anorexic, always anorexic. Like
alcoholism, eating disorders are not curable.
-
Anorexics are easy to
identify. They are noticeably skinny and don't eat.
-
Once an anorexic has
achieved a normal weight, she is recovered.
-
An eating disorder is about
eating too little or too much.
-
Parents are the cause of their child's
eating disorder.
-
Eating disorders affect only adolescent girls.
-
People
lose weight using laxatives and diuretics.
-
Physicians can be counted on
to discover and diagnose an eating disorder.
Things you need to know about children at
risk for eating disorders
-
Of the currently more than 10 million
Americans afflicted with eating disorders, 87 percent are children and
adolescents under the age of twenty.
-
The average age of eating disorders
onset has dropped from ages 13-17 to ages 9-12.
-
In a recent study, young
girls were quoted as saying that they would prefer to have cancer, lose
both their parents, or live through a nuclear holocaust than to be fat.
81% of 10 year olds are afraid of being fat.
-
The US Dept of Health and
Human Services task force reports that 80% of girls in grades 3 to 6
displayed body image concerns and dissatisfaction with their appearance.
By the time girls reached the 8th grade, 50% of them had been on diets,
putting them at risk for eating disorders and obesity. By age 13, 1o%
had reported the use of self-induced vomiting.
-
25% of first graders
admit to having been a diet.
-
Statistics show that children who diet have
a greater tendency to become overweight adults.
-
Childhood obesity is at
an all time high, afflicting five million children in America today, and
with another six million on the cusp.
-
Early puberty and the bodily
changes that go along with it have become a primary risk factor for the
onset of eating disorders. It is normal, and in fact, necessary, for
girls to gain 20 percent of their weight in fat during puberty.
-
The
number of males with eating disorders has doubled during the past
decade.
-
By the age of five, children of parents who suffer with eating
dysfunctions demonstrate a greater incidence of eating disturbances,
whining and depression.
-
Adolescents with eating disorders are at a
substantially elevated risk for
anxiety disorders, cardiovascular
symptoms, chronic fatigue,
chronic pain,
depressive disorders,
infectious diseases, insomnia, neurological symptoms, and
suicide
attempts during early adulthood.
-
A study of 692 adolescent girls showed
that radical weight-loss efforts lead to greater future weight gain and
a higher risk of obesity.
-
Eating disturbances in your very young child
may be the result of anxiety, compulsivity, or the child's imitation of
significant adult role models. Issues of control, identity, self-esteem,
coping and problem solving are what drive adolescent and adult eating
disorders
-
50% of American families do not sit down together to eat
dinner.
Things you need to know about eating
disorders and their effects
HealthyPlace.com Audio
The
Dangerous Consequences of Eating Disorders
It's a slippery slope how eating disorders start
innocently enough and how quickly extreme weight loss
and exercise behaviors can become obsessions that spiral
out of control. Guests and callers discuss how they
developed anorexia and bulimia and the devastating
impact these eating disorders have had on their lives.
Listen with
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-
The number of people with eating disorders
and subclinical eating disorders is triple the number of people with
AIDS.
-
Eating disorders are the most lethal of all the mental health
disorders, killing and maiming between six and 13 percent of their
victims.
-
Increasing numbers of married and professional women in their
twenties, thirties, forties and fifties are seeking help for eating
disorders that they have harbored secretly for twenty or thirty years.
Eating disorders are not restricted to the young.
-
Disordered eating is
rampant in our society. On American college campuses today, 40 to 50
percent of young women are disordered eaters.
-
Osteopenia is common in
adolescent girls with anorexia nervosa. It was found that despite
recovery for over one year, poor bone mineral accrual persists in
adolescent girls with AN in contrast to rapid bone accrual in healthy
girls.
-
In a recent study, it was determined that estrogen-progestin did
not significantly increase BMD compared with standard treatment. These
results question the common practice of prescribing hormone replacement
therapy to increase bone mass in anorexia nervosa.
Parenting Issues
-
Many
parents fear that
through honest intervention with their child about food and eating, they
could make matters worse or lose their child's love. They worry that
they may interfere with their child's privacy and developing autonomy by
stepping in to rectify an eating problem in the making. Parents need to
recognize that a problem cannot be resolved unless and until it is
identified and confronted.
-
Some health professionals believe that
parents do not belong in their child's treatment for eating disorders.
Professionals' concerns about the issues of separation/individuation and
protecting the child's privacy too frequently blind them to the need to
educate and guide parents, through the family therapy process, to become
mentors to their child, supportive of recovery efforts. The most
successful separation takes place through healthy bonding.
-
"Anorexia
Strategy: Family as Doctor" - "When a teenage girl develops anorexia, a
team of experts usually takes charge of bringing her back to a normal
weight, while her parents stand on the sidelines... The goal of the
therapy is to mobilize the family as a whole in a fight against the
eating disorder." Dr. James Lock, assistant professor of psychiatry at
Stanford School of Medicine. The New York Times; June 11,2002.
-
Too many
or too few parental limits imposed during the growing up years deprive
children of the opportunity to internalize the controls they need to
ultimately learn to regulate themselves. These children may eventually
turn to an eating disorder to compensate; nature abhors a vacuum.
by Abigail H. Natenshon, MA, LCSW
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