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Recovery of a Different Order
May 15, 2008 in Anicca-Impermanence, Avalokitesvara, Blogs, Bodhissattva, Buddhism, China, Chinese Buddhism, Chinese Taoism, Chogyam Trungpa Rinpoche, Culture, Divine Meditation & Healing, Divine Meditation and Healing, Dogen Zenji, Earthquake in China, Earthquake Recovery, Emotional Healing, Engaged Families, Family & Culture, Global Crisis, Goddess of Mercy, Government, Healing Through Meditation, Healing through Ritual, Health, Health & Wellbeing, Kuan Yin, Kuan Yin's Veneration, Life & Death, Malnutrition and the Modern World, Natural Disasters, news, Non-Self, Prayers & Thoughts, Relief Efforts for Chinese Earthquake Victims, Samantabhadra, Sichuan Province/Earthquake Victims, Sogyal Rinpoche Teachings, Spirituality, Tibetan Masters, United Efforts/Relief Campaigns, World News | Tags: Activism & Eating Disorders, Adolescent Anorexia Nervosa and Family-Based Therapy, Anicca-Impermanence, Anorexia Nervosa, Avalokitesvara, Bodhissattva, Bulimia, Bulimia Nervosa, China, Chinese Buddhism, Chinese Taoism, COE (Compulsive Over-Eating), Divine Meditation & Healing, Dogen Zenji, Earthquake in China, Earthquake Recovery, Eating Disorder Advocacy, Eating Disorder Hope & Recovery, Eating Disorder Recovery, Eating Disorders, EDNOS, Engaged Families & ED's, Engaged Parents & Eating Disorders, Family & Culture, Global Crisis, Goddess of Mercy, Healing through Ritual, Health & Wellbeing, Kuan Yin's Veneration, Life & Death, Malnutrition in a Modern World, Natural Disasters, news, Non-Self, Parent Advocates & Eating Disorders, Prayers & Thoughts, Relief Efforts for Chinese Earthquake Victims, Samantabhadra, Sichuan Province/Earthquake Victims, Sogyal Rinpoche, Spirituality, Tibetan Masters, United Efforts/Relief Campaigns, World News | Leave a comment
By now everyone has read and seen the devastation caused by the earthquake measuring a magnitude of 7.9 in the Sichuan province of China. We have been holding our breath these past couple of days since dear friends of ours were living and working in China but were extremely fortunate and arrived saftely back home in India.
Many, many others are yet to be accounted for, and have not been left untouched by this horrific natural disaster– something of this extent not witnessed in over thirty years.
There are several relief organizations scrambling to help those who have been affected by this catastrophe, though what’s growing increasingly frustrating is how the local government is really making things difficult for aid-workers to get through and deliver assistance ASAP.
We continue to send our deepest sympathies and heartfelt condolences to all those affected by this tragic event.
-shanti
“This day is a special day, it is yours
Yesterday slipped away, it cannot be filled anymore with meaning
About tomorrow nothing is known.
But this day, today, is yours, make use of it.
Today you can make someone happy.
Today you can help another,
This day is a special day, it is yours.
-INDIAN POEM-
Charte d’engagement voluntaire sur l’image du corps…
April 16, 2008 in anorexia, Anorexia Nervosa, Behavioral Health, Body Image & Film, Carer Support, COE (Compulsive Over-Eating), Community Health Education, Constructs of Pyschological Distress, Consumer Alert, Culture, Disordered Eating Behaviors, Eating Disorder Advocacy, Eating Disorder News, Eating Disorder Treatment, Eating Disorders, Eating Disorders and Mental Health, Eating Patterns and Weight Related Issues, ED advocacy, ED Hope & Recovery, ED recovery, ED's and the Media, EDNOS, Empowered Families, Empowered Parents, Engaged Families, Environmental factores influencing ED's, Evidence Based Treatment for Eating Disorders, F.S.P., family, Family & Culture, Family Based Therapy, Family supported ED treatment, France Legislataion & ED's, Government, Health, Health & Wellbeing, Health Care, Hope & Recovery for ED's, Marketing scams for ED's, Mental Health, Parent Activism and Eating Disorders, Parent Advocates, Personal Empowerment, Personal Narratives, Policy & Action, Power of Media & ED's, Public Education of ED's, Public Health, Public Policy, Self-Care, Society, Society and Weight Related Issues, Socio-Cultural Factors and Advertising to Promote ED's, Sociocultural Factors in Eating Disorders, thin idealization, Thoughts, U.M.P., Valerie Boyer lawmaker | Tags: Add new tag, anorexia, Anorexia Nervosa, Body Wars, Bouches-du-Rhone, Bulimia, Bulimia Nervosa, COE (Compulsive Over-Eating), constructs of psychological distress, Eating Disorder Recovery, ED News International, ED-NOS, Environmental Factors in ED's, Europe and Media Censorship, F.S.P., Family Empowerment and ED, France Legislation and ED's, France Legislation on Body Weight/Images and Anorexia, French Lawmakers, Government & Health Policy, Health Law Advocates, Health Policy & Action & Legislation, Image/Body Perception and the Media, Mass Communication, Media discourse and debate, news, Parent Activism and Eating Disorders, Perpetuation of Idealized Media Images, Personal Empowerment, Policy & Action, Power of the Media and ED's, Profit/Media & Eating Disorders, Promotion of Thin-spiration and Legislation, Society and Weight Related Issues, Sociocultural Factors in Eating Disorders, U.M.P., Valerie Boyer lawmaker | Leave a comment
APF/Getty Images Bertrand Guay
There is quite a bit of debate heating up lately, even over at ATDT parents are sharing their thoughts on this topic, regarding recent legistlation created by France lawmaker Valerie Boyer that France is passing towards imposing strict fines, even imprisonment against the proliferation and promotion of “pro-ana/mia” within websites, media images, the fashion industry and beyond that continue to hightlight clearly unhealthy anorexic/ED’d-looking, emaciated ultra-thin bodies– “legislating body weight” some are finger-waging.
The reviews and feedback are certainly mixed, some downright misinformed- stiil -and so sorely one-sided which to me only illuminates just how complex these issues are; and more importantly how much more of this conversation and dialogue needs to keep happening and developing.
I haven’t delved into a full exploration of my opinions on this yet, but I do think while we can’t police every site, ban every image, twisted ideal there certainly is something that we are all responding and reacting to when we see someone who looks so severely malnourished, skeletal and unwell.
As a mother of a daughter who suffers from Anorexia Nerovsa I do have an immediate heartwrenching reaction to this issue, and do believe there is not just a “personal” responsiblity but public and social conscience we all need to be connected to and address at some basic level without turning a blind-eye and pretending none of this has any impact on society whatsoever– clearly it does.
: America The Beautiful :
April 9, 2008 in America The Beautiful, anorexia, Anorexia Nervosa, Behavioral Health, Bodies and Film, Body Acceptance, Body Image & Film, Chicago Film Makers, Chicago Films, COE (Compulsive Over-Eating), Community Health Education, Constructs of Pyschological Distress, Culture, Darryl Roberts, Disordered Eating Behaviors, Eating Disorder Advocacy, Eating Disorder News, Eating Disorders, Eating Disorders and Mental Health, Eating Patterns and Weight Related Issues, ED Hope & Recovery, ED recovery, EDNOS, eliminating stigma, Empowered Families, Empowered Parents, Environmental factores influencing ED's, Family & Culture, Family Education/Resources, Film & Society, Film and Critique/Review, Film Documentary, Film Genres, Health & Wellbeing, Improvement of Psychological and Behavioral Treatments, Mental Health, news, Parent Activism and Eating Disorders, Parent Support, Parent/Family Support and Eating Disorders, Personal, Personal Empowerment, Personal Stories, Public Health, Self-Help Narratives, Society and Weight Related Issues, Sociocultural Factors in Eating Disorders, Symbolic Imagery, Thoughts | Tags: America The Beautiful, anorexia, Anorexia Nervosa, Behavioral Health, Bodies & Film, Body Acceptance, body image, Body Image & Film, Bulimia, Bulimia Nervosa, Chicago Film Makers, Chicago Films, COE (Compulsive Over-Eating), Collective Discussion of Film and Weight Related Issues, Community Events, Community Health Education, Constructs of Pychological Stress, Darryl Roberts, Eating Disorder Advocacy, Eating Disorder Recovery, Eating Disorders, EDNOS, Film and Critique/Review, Film Documentary, Film Genres, Health Issues, IAEDP, Mental Health, news, Obsessive Preoccupation with Weight, Parent Advocates, Parent Support/Education and ED's, Personal, Personal Empowerment, Sociocultural Factors in Eating Disorders, Thoughts, Weight & Stereotypes, Weight Issues and Film Documentaries | Leave a comment
Oh yeah! May 9th (or from what others have been stating but I haven’t found listed: April 25th) heading to the ‘Windy City’- Chicago to check out this city’s native film-maker, Darryl Roberts documentary that has gotten plenty of accolades; and additional kudos from those who attended last week’s IAEDP conference.
It’s interesting that within the past year two male film-makers (perhaps more– feel free to share if you know) the other is Glenn Gers and his film: Disfigured (which a Cali friend of mine got to see during the film festival and loved) have dared to dig deeper into our culture’s preoccupations within this topic– I say it’s bloody fantastic and about time!
Join the caravan if you are able.
ciao-
Three Cheers- A Seven Year Slump is Slowly Moving Forward
March 6, 2008 in Access to ED Care/Treatment, Accurate Information Campaigns in ED's, anorexia, Anorexia and Depression, Anorexia Nervosa, Behavioral Health, Big Pharma, Bulimia, Bulimia Nervosa, Consumer Alert, DSM-IV Criteria for ED's, DSM-V and Expanded ED Criteria, Eating Disorder Advocacy, Eating Disorders, Eating Disorders and Mental Health, ED advocacy, ED Coalition, ED Hope & Recovery, Eli Lilly, eliminating stigma, Empowered Families, Empowered Parents, family, Family & Friends Network (PFN), Family Education/Resources, Government, Health, Health & Wellbeing, Health Care, Health Care For All, Health Insurance Discrimination, Human Rights, Improvement of Psychological and Behavioral Treatments, Insurance Coverage and ED's, Insurance Disparity, La Follette School of Public Affairs, Mental Health, Mental Health Advocacy for Equality in Insurance Covera, Mental Health America, Mental Health Discrimination, Mental Health Parity, news, NYSE LLY, Parent Activism and Eating Disorders, Parent Advocates, Paul Wellstone Mental Health & Addict Equity Act, Personal, Personal Empowerment, Personal Stories, Policy & Action, Policy Analysis, Public Education of ED's, Public Policy, Society, Thoughts | Tags: Anorexia Nervosa, Anorexia Nervosa and Mental Health, Behavioral Health, Bulimia Nervosa, Business and Corruption, Corporate Greed and Mental Health Parity, Eating Disorder Coalition, Eating Disorders, Eating Disorders and Insurance Coverage, EDC Lobby Day, Eli Lilly and Bias, Empowered Families, Empowered Parents, Empowered Patients, Erasing Mental Health Stigma, Families Against Mental Health Discrimination, family, Government, Health, Health and Family Services, Health Care Advocacy, Health Care For All, Health Law Advocates, Human Rights, Insurance, Insurance Coverage and Eating Disorders, Insurance Disparity, La Follette School of Public Affairs, media, Mental Health Parity Bill Hr 1424, NAMI, news, Parent Activism and Eating Disorders, Parent Advocates to End Insurance Discrimination for Ea, Parents against Eating Disorder Discrimination/Stigma, Paul Wellstone, Personal, Policy & Action, Policy Analysis, Public Policy and Mental Health, Recovery, Social Policies, Society, writing | 2 comments
“It’s about opening up the doors and ending the shadow of discrimination against the mentally ill.”
-Patrick Kennedy
Today’s news is quite uplifting. And the 268-148 vote does speak to the dire need to continue towards enacting mental-health parity and mandating health insurance coverage equal to that of physical illness for mental health and addiction. I think Paul Wellstone would be encouraged to see some progress being made after nearly a decade of back and forth bi-partisan bickering and huge corporate influence , (and currently, to no one’s surprise, big-ph-arm Eli Lilly is really throwing a tantrum!), to strangle this vital legislation.
And there are plenty of critics who are rallying this victory as “mental-health insanity” and clearly looking only at their own financial dunk, but it’s truly time to stop stigmatizing those with mental illness who clearly need the same standard of quality care and treatment that any sane society would not withhold or financially ruin one with personally while working towards full health, healing and recovery.
I, unfortunately live in a state that does not currently have mental-health parity- yet. But I was impressed to read an in depth study done last spring by the La Follette School of Public Affairs in our state, that despite not having all the conclusive data to make absolute recommendations regarding mental-health parity, has incredibly convincing and thought-provoking details putting to bunk some of the primary reasoning against implementing mental-health parity that I would encourage anyone interested in advocating for mental health disparity to read. These studies really can be applied and adapted for further critique and implemented across all states, so that we will eventually see more than thirteen states that have adopted mental-health parity law.
-shanti
: NEDAW 2008 :
February 28, 2008 in Access to ED Care/Treatment, Accurate Information Campaigns in ED's, anorexia, Anorexia Nervosa, Behavioral Health, Body Acceptance, Bulimia, Bulimia Nervosa, Carer Support, COE (Compulsive Over-Eating), Community Health Education, Eating Disorder Advocacy, Eating Disorder News, Eating Disorder Treatment, Eating Disorders, ED advocacy, ED Hope & Recovery, ED recovery, EDNOS, eliminating stigma, Empowered Families, Empowered Parents, Engaged Families, Erase Stigma of Anorexia, Family Education/Resources, Health, Health Care, Hope & Recovery for ED's, Improvement of Psychological and Behavioral Treatments, Insurance Coverage and ED's, Mental Health, Mental Health Parity, National Eating Disorders Association, NEDAW 2008, Parent Activism and Eating Disorders, Parent Advocates, Personal Empowerment, Public Education of ED's, Residential ED Treatment Centers | Tags: anorexia, Anorexia Nervosa, Body Acceptance, body image, Body Image and NEDAW, Bulimia, Bulimia Nervosa, COE, Community Events, Community Health Education, Eating Disorder Advocacy, eating disorder myths and misconceptions, Eating Disorders, EDNOS, Embrace Your Genes, Empowered Families/Parents and Eating Disorders, Health, Health&Wellbeing, National Eating Disorders Association, NEDAW, news, Parent Activism and Eating Disorders, Parent Advocates for Education on Eating Disorders and, Personal Empowerment and Eating Disorder Recovery, Recovery and Hope for Eating Disorders, Support&Recovery | 2 comments
So many great happenings during National Eating Disorders Awareness Week 2008 – hope everyone is able to partake in some NEDAW events in your corresponding local areas. This year’s theme, much like last year’s, is still quite pivotal and we can all do our share to spread awareness, gently and compassionately encourage those who need support and treatment to take those vital initial steps with our love and backing.
Reach out, celebrate all our diverse shapes and sizes, EMBRACE each other, and share our stories- spread the word, be heard, dispel misconceptions and myths that still surround eating disorders and those that suffer- change can happen even with the simplest and smallest of steps!
Laura Collins, as always, an incredible inspiration, advocate, and Mom has posted some great commentary on the Congressional Briefing for the Eating Disorders Coalition with Dr Cynthia Bulik’s wisdom- Power to the People!
XO
DSM in Need of Broadened ED Criteria
February 8, 2008 in Access to ED Care/Treatment, Adolescent Anorexia Nervosa, American Journal of Psychiatry, anorexia, Anorexia Nervosa, APA/NIH Conference Series, Behavioral Health, Biostatistics, Brown University, Bulimia, Bulimia Nervosa, COE (Compulsive Over-Eating), Community Health Education, Diagnostic Deficiencies Identified in DSM-IV, Dr Mark Zimmerman, DSM Definitions, DSM nomenclature, DSM-IV Criteria for Anorexia Nervosa, DSM-IV Criteria for ED's, DSM-V and Expanded ED Criteria, Eating Disorder Advocacy, Eating Disorder News, Eating Disorder Research, Eating Disorder Treatment, ED advocacy, ED Hope & Recovery, EDNOS, Empirical Research/Studies and ED's, Empowered Families, Empowered Parents, Evidence Based Treatment for Eating Disorders, Evidence-Based Medicine, Genetic Analysis and Eating Disorders, Health, Health & Wellbeing, Health Care, Improvement of Psychological and Behavioral Treatments, Mental Health, National Institutes of Health, news, Psychopharmacology, Research and Recovery, Rhode Island Hospital, Science | Tags: Access to Mental Health Care/Eating Disorders, Accurate Diagnosis of ED's, American Psychological Association, anorexia, APA/NIH Conference Series, Bio Med Psych, Brown University, Bulimia, Comprehensive Review, Diagnosis of Eating Disorders, Dr Mark Zimmerman, DSM-IV, DSM-IV nomenclature problems, Eating Disorders, EDNOS, Empirical Research for ED's, Health, Human Behavior, Improved ED Treatment/Care, Mental Illness, MIDAS-Methods to Improve Diagnostic Assessment and Serv, news, psychiatry, Research Agenda for DSM-V, Research/Studies, Rhode Island Hopsital | Leave a comment
Continued studies, most recently published by Dr Mark Zimmerman for Methods to Improve Diagnostic Assessment and Services (MIDAS), and additional colleagues of both Rhode Island Hospital and Brown University, indicate that the current DSM-IV lacks adequate “diagnostic criteria for eating disorders”, and that “researchers recommend a broadening of the criteria” since currently only anorexia and bulimia are “officially recognized and formally defined”.
Makes definite sense. Especially since DSM-IV was published back in 1994, and in reading the current DSM-V “white papers” , “DSM definitions are virtually devoid of biology, despite a large body of research that indicates a neurological basis for most mental disorders”. And that for over the past ten to fifteen years, there has been a steady increase of research and findings developed within eating disorders expanding beyond just AN and BN, but also EDNOS (Eating Disorder Not Otherwise Specified) which counts for “more than half of the patients in treatment centers”, as well as Binge Eating, COE (Compulsive Over-Eating), and other “subthreshold variants” that clearly expand the scope of eating disorder symptoms and diagnosis.
From what the DSM-V timeline indicates, this much needed and updated manual will be published sometime in 2011, which seems like an eternity for many of us already too familiar with the complexity of eating disorders and more often inadequate care/treatment of our loved ones.
So it’s encouraging to see the continued efforts and commitment of researchers and clinicians in the trenches (along with the rest of us!) collecting the data, and analyzing the results for peer review, publication, and improved teaching/training- which ultimately leads to better treatment and recovery options for those in need.
Nuggets Become Boulders for Change
January 16, 2008 in Access to ED Care/Treatment, Accurate Information Campaigns in ED's, Adolescent Eating Behaviors, American Journal of Psychiatry, anorexia, Anorexia Nervosa, Community Health Education, Dr Cynthia Bulik, Eating Disorder Advocacy, Eating Disorder Research, Eating Disorders, ED advocacy, ED Hope & Recovery, Erase Stigma of Anorexia, Evidence Based Treatment for Eating Disorders, Genetic and Environmental causes of ED's, Health, Health Care, Insurance Coverage and ED's, Insurance Disparity, International Journal of Eating Disorders, Mental Health, Neuroscience and Eating Disorders, news, Policy & Action, Questionnaire Studies/Data, Research and Recovery, Science, Sociocultural Factors in Eating Disorders, UNC study | Tags: Access to ED Treatment, biology, Blame-Based Stigma, Dr Cynthia Bulik, Eating Disorder Advocacy, Eating Disorder Research, ED Support, Environmental Factors in ED's, Erase Stigma of Anorexia, Evidence Based Treatment for Eating Disorders, genetic/biological components to ED's, Health Care, Insurance Coverage and ED's, International Journal of Eating Disorders, journalism, media, Mental Health, Michele A. Crisatulli, news, Questionnaire Studies/Data, research, Science, Sociocultural Factors in Eating Disorders, UNC study, UNC.edu, University of North Carolina Eating Disorders Program | Leave a comment
The news of UNC’s study has been bustling about, but it’s worth posting this fine gem of a quote from senior author and director of UNC’s Eating Disorders Program, Dr Cynthia Bulik: “even a nugget of accurate biological information can influence how health care professionals preceive the illness” -and similarly can change the perceptions of others as well.
Nuggets of Information- Boulders of Truth… “POW!”
When Silence is Deadly
January 16, 2008 in Access to ED Care/Treatment, Adolescent Eating Behaviors, Anorexia and Depression, Anorexia Nervosa, Community Health Education, Eating Disorder Advocacy, Eating Disorders, ED advocacy, ED Coalition, ED Hope & Recovery, Empowered Families, Family & Friends Network (PFN), Family Based Therapy, Family History of AN, Forensic Psychology, Genetic and Environmental causes of ED's, Health, Improvement of Psychological and Behavioral Treatments, Mental Health, Neuroscience and Eating Disorders, news, Parent, Parental Support, Policy & Action, Research and Recovery, Women and ED | Tags: Access to Eating Disorder Care, Anorexia and Depression, ED Awareness, ED Coalition, ED Hope&Recovery, family, Family Supported ED Treatment/Recovery, Forensic Psychology, Genetic and Environmental causes of ED's, Health Policy & Action, Mental Health, Mental Health Parity, National Eating Disorder Coalition, news, Parental Support, Research and Recovery, Women and ED | Leave a comment
Extremely tragic news of a mother who “believed there was no hope” for her daughter who was suffering from anorexia and depression, which ironically she herself began battling around the same age- but seemed to be particularly well hidden from the rest of the family’s awareness- ends in the death of a promising young life.
This heartwrenching loss brings to mind many who struggle in silence and isolation, but what few still come to terms with is that this illness can indeed take lives not fully lived, and at any age.
Families, parents, and sufferers affected by disordered eating and self-starvation need and deserve compassion, effective treatment, and ongoing support. Public awareness, insurance coverage and access to quality care, along with early intervention are still what we all need to keep pushing for so that HOPE becomes reality; and lives can be restored.
Why Family Meals Matter
January 15, 2008 in Adolescent Eating Behaviors, American Journal of Psychiatry, anorexia, Anorexia Nervosa, Biostatistics, Community Health Education, Disordered Eating Behaviors, Division of Epidemiology, Dr Dianne Neumark-Sztainer, Eating Disorder Advocacy, Eating Disorder News, Eating Disorders, Eating Patterns and Weight Related Issues, ED advocacy, Empowered Families, Evidence Based Treatment for Eating Disorders, Family Based Therapy, Family Meals, Family supported ED treatment, Health, Health & Wellbeing, Improvement of Psychological and Behavioral Treatments, Maudsley Method, MM/FBT, Parental Support, Project EAT/Eating Among Teens, Public Health and Nutrition, Science, University of Chicago ED treatment, University of Minnesota | Tags: Adolscent Eating Behaviors, American Medical Association, anorexia, Behavioral Health, Biostatistics, Bulima, Community Health Education, Disordered Eating Behaviors, Dr Dianne Neumark-Sztainer, Eating Among Teens, Eating Disorder Advocacy, Eating Disorders, Empowered Parents/Families, Family Based Therapy, Family Meals, Health, Health & Wellbeing, JAMA, Mary Story PhD, Maudsley Method, news, nutrition interventions, Pediatric&Adolescent Medicine, Project EAT I/II, Public Health and Nutrition, Pychiatry, Pychology, Science, University of Minnesota Project EAT | 2 comments
Most of us realize how vitally important our meals with our loved ones are when they are suffeing from an eating disorder, and that they are not always an easy affair, especially when the eating disorder is unbearably strong and entrenched while healing through recovery.
Those ’family meals’ are also jeopardized by rushed schedules, overworked and exhausted parents, and seemingly less and less of those maintained moments when we can gather together, even with the simplest but nutritious of food prepartions to share, rekindle and reconnect.
Food sustains us and nourishes us in so many ways- and as Laura Collins always reminds us: FOOD IS MEDICINE- distinctly so when your child suffers from an eating disorder.
Recently Dr Dianne Neumark-Sztainer from the University of Minnesota co-authored a longitudinal study on “the potential role of family meals as a protective factor against disorderd eating behaviors“ which may be the first published investigation of its kind examining the benefits and implications of family meals from their ongoing (love this) Project EAT research study.
I think this is empowering news since there are still lingering and erroneous views that parents, and even worse, that the sufferer are to blame or caused the eating disorder. Studies such as these also provide additional support and consideration into looking more closely at the benefits of Family-Based or Maudsley Method treatments for eating disorders and realign what we all know intuively heals a malnourished body and mind.
‘Language Analysis Insightful in those with Anorexia’
January 3, 2008 in American Journal of Psychiatry, Anorexia Nervosa, Dr Markus Wolf, Eating Disorder Advocacy, Eating Disorder News, Eating Disorders, ED advocacy, Empowered Families, Evidence Based Treatment for Eating Disorders, Family supported ED treatment, Health, Improvement of Psychological and Behavioral Treatments, Journal writing and ED, Linguistics, Mental Health Parity, National Institutes of Health, Neuroscience and Eating Disorders, Parental Support, Reuters Health, Science | Tags: Anorexia Nervosa, Applied Text Analysis, Caregivers, cognitive processing and Eating Disorders, Dr Markus Wolf, Eating Disorders, family, Health, Improving Psychological and Behavioral Treatments for E, Journal writing and Eating Disorders, Linguistic Inquiry, Linguistics, Mental Health Parity/Policies, neuroscienc, news, Psychology, Reuters Health | 1 comment
As any writer knows, the power of words can be Herculean.
Reuters Health briefly highlights a ‘applied text analytic methods’ study carried out by Dr Markus Wolf at the University Hospital Heidelberg in Germany that can be helpful towards improved therapeutic treatments, and better understanding of the cognitive processing of the eating disordered brain.
Many of us, as parents with children suffering from an ED might also know how delicate, negative, and self-defeating our childs’ thoughts, behaviors, and words can be to themselves- especially when we know how this illness robs our children of their true selves during treatment and recovery.
That’s why it’s even more vital to remind ourselves first and foremost: we are not to blame or at fault for our childs’ eating disorder; and secondly, to separate your child from the eating disorder/illness, especially at the most difficult moments through refeeding, treatment and recovery when it can be the most challenging thing to remind ourselves of.








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