Eating Disorders Clinic Inc.
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Press Releases

France targets anorexia in media
 

The French National Assembly has passed a groundbreaking bill which seeks to criminalise the promotion in the media of extreme thinness.

The bill targets pro-anorexia websites and publications that encourage girls and young women to starve themselves.

It will affect websites, fashion houses, magazines and advertisers.

If approved by France's upper house, those found to have encouraged severe weight loss could be fined up to 45,000 euros and face three years in prison.

 

French Health Minister Roselyne Bachelot said the proposed law would help stop advice on how to become ultra-thin being spread through pro-anorexia sites on the internet.

"Encouraging young girls to lie to their doctors, advising them on foods that are easier to regurgitate and inciting them to beat themselves up each time they eat is not freedom of expression," Ms Bachelot told the assembly.

 

'Death messages'

"These messages are death messages. Our country must be able to prosecute those who are hiding behind these websites," she said.

 

Jacques Domergue, a lawmaker supporting the bill, said that the intention was to send a strong message to society.

"It is necessary because we know now that we have a risk to some part of the population, young girls, who are pressed by different types of lobbies and the risk is increasing."

 

The law could also affect the fashion industry and magazine editors who publish photographs of extremely thin models.

If the bill is passed by France's upper house, the Senate, in the coming weeks offenders could face jail sentences of up to two years and 30,000 euros ($47,387; £23,980) in fines.

 

A three-year term and 45,000 euros in fines could be sought against offenders if the incitement was found to have lead to death.

 

The BBC's Emma Jane Kirby in Paris says that with 40,000 anorexics in France, many parliamentarians feel the law cannot come soon enough.

 
 
New York Times
 
March 2, 2008
 

Starving Themselves, Cocktail in Hand

 

MANOREXIA. Orthorexia. Diabulimia. Binge Eating Disorder.

 

All are dangerous variations on the eating disorders anorexia and bulimia, and have become buzzwords that are popping up on Web sites and blogs, on television and in newspaper articles. As celebrity magazines chronicle the glamorous and the suffering, therapists and a growing number of researchers are trying to treat and understand the conditions.

The latest entry in the lexicon of food-related ills is drunkorexia, shorthand for a disturbing blend of behaviors: self-imposed starvation or bingeing and purging, combined with alcohol abuse.

 

Drunkorexia is not an official medical term. But it hints at a troubling phenomenon in addiction and eating disorders. Among those who are described as drunkorexics are college-age binge drinkers, typically women, who starve all day to offset the calories in the alcohol they consume. The term is also associated with serious eating disorders, particularly bulimia, which often involve behavior like bingeing on food — and alcohol — and then purging.

 

Anorexics, because they severely restrict their calorie intake, tend to avoid alcohol. But some drink to calm down before eating or to ease the anxiety of having indulged in a meal. Others consume alcohol as their only sustenance. Still others use drugs like cocaine and methamphetamine to suppress their appetites.

 

“There are women who are afraid to put a grape in their mouth but have no problem drinking a beer,” said Douglas Bunnell, the director of outpatient clinical services for the Renfrew Center, based in Philadelphia.

The center, like a small but growing number of eating-disorder and addiction-treatment facilities, most on the West Coast, offers a dual focus on substance abuse and eating disorders.

 

Dr. Bunnell, the past president of the National Eating Disorders Association, said the obsession with being skinny and the social acceptance of drinking and using drugs — along with the sense, lately, that among celebrities, checking into rehab is almost a given, if not downright chic — are partly to blame.

 

“Both disorders are behaviors that are glorified and reinforced,” Dr. Bunnell said. “Binge drinking is almost cool and hip, and losing weight and being thin is a cultural imperative for young women in America. Mixing both is not surprising, and it has reached a tipping point in terms of public awareness.”

 

Psychologists say that eating disorders, like other addictions, are often rooted in the need to numb emotional pain with substances or the rush provided by bingeing and purging. The disorders are often driven by childhood trauma like sexual abuse, neglect and other sources of mental anguish.

 

Manorexia is the male version of anorexia. Orthorexia is an obsession with what is perceived as healthy food — eliminating fats and preservatives, for example. But people with this condition can dangerously deprive themselves of needed nutrients.

 

Diabulimia refers to diabetics who avoid taking insulin, which can cause weight gain, in order to control their weight. Despite the name, the disorder does not typically involve purging.

Binge Eating Disorder refers to obsessive overeating, especially of foods high in salt and sugar, that does not involve excessive exercise or purging to compensate for the high caloric intake.

 

Judy Van De Veen, 36, who lives in Gillette, N.J., became anorexic at 24. She said she starved herself, meting out small bites of low-calorie food for two months. Then she began bingeing and purging, throwing up entire boxes of cereal, whole pizzas and fast food from drive-throughs that sometimes cost her $80 a day.

She went into treatment, both inpatient and outpatient, for her eating disorder for several years in the late 1990s, with mixed results. In 2001, still struggling with bulimia, she took up drinking. If she ate while drinking, she said, she would purge, but then consume more alcohol to make up for the loss, because she wanted to remain drunk.

Many bulimics who drink use alcohol to vomit, experts on eating disorders say, because liquid is easier to purge. They also tend to vomit because they often drink on empty stomachs.

 

“In the beginning of my eating disorder I wouldn’t touch alcohol because it is so high in calories,” said Ms. Van De Veen, who later found herself regularly hospitalized for dehydration. “But I have the disease of more: I just want more no matter what it is.”

 

Two years into her drinking problem, she joined a 12-step program. She spent the next two years in and out of six residential rehab programs, spending about $25,000 of her own money because she didn’t have health insurance. But none of the programs were equipped to address eating disorders, so she binged and purged and her eating disorder raged.

 

Ms. Van De Veen said she has been sober for three years, but is still struggling with bulimia. She now has a 14-month-old daughter, Cheyenne, and she said that her pregnancy and support groups had helped her make progress on her eating disorder.

 

“I had an excuse to eat,” she said of being pregnant. “I didn’t care and I loved it.”

But she said the temptation to binge and purge is haunting her again.

Trish, 27, who has had an eating disorder for the last 10 years, recently checked into Renfrew, her fifth stint in a treatment center or hospital.

 

Like Ms. Van De Veen, Trish, who agreed to be interviewed on the condition that only her first name be used to protect her privacy, struggled with anorexia first and then found alcohol. Before she was admitted to Renfrew, she said she was blacking out from lack of food and suffering from excruciating stomach pain.

 

Trish, a nurse who lives in Ohio and works with cardiac patients, said she would starve herself through her 8- or 12-hour shifts, staring at the clock and fixating on when she could have her first drink. Drinking, she said, relaxed her when she had to eat in front of other people, a huge source of stress.

 

“The alcohol is probably what kept any weight on me,” she said in an interview late last month at the Renfrew Center, which she entered on New Year’s Eve for eight weeks of treatment.

“Drinking helped me be less anxious,” she said. “It helped me be more of Trish. The two go together: If I drink more, I’m more into my eating disorder and vice versa.”

 

Studies show that binge drinking and alcohol abuse are on the rise among women, who are also more prone than men to eating disorders.

 

About 25 to 33 percent of bulimics also struggle with alcohol or drugs, according to a study published last year in the journal Biological Psychiatry. Between 20 and 25 percent of anorexics have substance abuse problems, the study found.

 

A growing number of researchers are examining the psychological and neurological links between eating disorders and substance abuse: Does eating a chocolate bar, or bingeing and purging, stimulate the same pleasure centers in the brain as drugs or alcohol?

 

Suzette M. Evans, a professor of clinical neuroscience at Columbia, recently began a study of the connection between bulimia and substance abuse, a field she said has been neglected.

 

“People are finally beginning to realize that food can function in the same way as drugs and alcohol,” Dr. Evans said.

 

As more patients seek treatment for both eating disorders and substance abuse, a complicated set of mixed messages can arise. The response to addiction is abstinence; but quitting food is not an option.

 

“We’re trying to get our patients to find effective behaviors and life skills,” said Dr. Kevin Wandler, the vice president for medical services at Remuda Ranch, which addresses both eating disorders and addiction at its facilities in Arizona and Virginia.

 

“Eating normally would be an effective behavior, but it’s easier to give up alcohol and drugs because you never need it again,” Dr. Wandler said. “If your drug is food, that’s a challenge.”

 

Trish left Renfrew on Feb. 22, after her second time in treatment there. She was determined, she said, to break her obsessions with weight, food and alcohol. Before she checked in, “I didn’t even have the energy to laugh,” she said. But as she prepared to go home, she had more hope than she has had in years.

“I will not live my life like this,” she said. “I’ve learned this time not to be ashamed. I want to love myself and I want to forgive myself.”


Date: Tue, 22 Apr 2008 10:32:01 -0400
University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill issued the following news release:

Three Out of Four American Women Have Disordered Eating

Sixty-five percent of American women between the ages of 25 and 45
report having disordered eating behaviors, according to the results of a
new survey by SELF Magazine in partnership with the University of North
Carolina at Chapel Hill.

An additional 10 percent of women report symptoms consistent with eating
disorders such as anorexia, bulimia nervosa and binge eating disorder,
meaning that a total of 75 percent of all American women endorse some
unhealthy thoughts, feelings or behaviors related to food or their bodies.

"Our survey found that these behaviors cut across racial and ethnic
lines and are not limited to any one group," said Cynthia R. Bulik,
Ph.D., William and Jeanne Jordan Distinguished Professor of Eating
Disorders in the UNC School of Medicine's department of psychiatry and
director of the UNC Eating Disorders Program. "Women who identified
their ethnic backgrounds as Hispanic or Latina, white, black or African
American and Asian were all represented among the women who reported
unhealthy eating behaviors."

"What we found most surprising was the unexpectedly high number of women
who engage in unhealthy purging activities," said Bulik, who is also a
nutrition professor in the School of Public Health. "More than 31
percent of women in the survey reported that in an attempt to lose
weight they had induced vomiting or had taken laxatives, diuretics or
diet pills at some point in their life. Among these women, more than 50
percent engaged in purging activities at least a few times a week and
many did so every day."

Lucy Danziger, the editor-in-chief of SELF Magazine said: "SELF's
investigation will help our 5.8 million readers determine whether their
eating habits could be considered disordered, and the survey results
show that more women than expected will identify with various disordered
eating behaviors," said "Recognizing what's normal and what's dangerous
is the first step all women can take in developing a more positive body
image and a healthier approach to food."

Although the type of disordered eating behaviors the survey uncovered
don't necessarily have potentially lethal consequences like anorexia or
bulimia nervosa, women report they are associated with emotional and
physical distress. And despite the stereotype that eating issues affect
mostly young women, the survey found that those in their 30s and 40s
report disordered eating at virtually the same rates. Findings show that:

* 75 percent of women report disordered eating behaviors or symptoms
consistent with eating disorders; so three out of four have an unhealthy
relationship with food or their bodies
* 67 percent of women (excluding those with actual eating disorders) are
trying to lose weight
* 53 percent of dieters are already at a healthy weight and are still
trying to lose weight
* 39 percent of women say concerns about what they eat or weigh
interfere with their happiness
* 37 percent regularly skip meals to try to lose weight
* 27 percent would be "extremely upset" if they gained just five pounds
* 26 percent cut out entire food groups
* 16 percent have dieted on 1,000 calories a day or fewer
* 13 percent smoke to lose weight
* 12 percent often eat when they're not hungry; 49 percent sometimes do

Eating habits that women think are normal - such as banishing
carbohydrates, skipping meals and in some cases extreme dieting - may
actually be symptoms of disordered eating.

The online survey garnered responses from 4,023 women who answered
detailed questions about their eating habits. Results and analysis
appear in SELF's May 2008 issue, on newsstands from today (April 22)
through May 19. SELF and UNC's goal was to discover the unfiltered
reality of the eating habits of American women, and ultimately, to help
women develop less obsessive, more accepting attitudes toward their
bodies and a healthier relationship with food, Danziger said.

SELF's report includes tips to help all women even out their behavior by
adopting a moderate approach to eating. Tips for staying healthy
include: separating mood from food; eliminating extreme thinking; eating
breakfast; and finding realistic body role models.

Bulik and study co-author Lauren Reba-Harrelson, a third year clinical
psychology graduate student in UNC's College of Arts and Sciences, will
give a presentation about the survey and their collaboration with SELF
on May 17 at the Academy for Eating Disorders' 2008 International
Conference on Eating Disorders in Seattle.

Women can take a version of the survey at http://www.self.com to see how
they compare with other readers' answers and share their thoughts in the
Hot Topics section of the magazine's Web site.











 

 

 

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