Saturday, July 28, 2012

Eating Disorder Hope Blog Update

To our dear Visitors and Friends:

We wish to thank you for your continued support and loyalty to Eating Disorder Hope.  Recently, we have made several changes to our websites and blogs, and as a result, we will no longer be posting to this particular blog.  We would like to re-direct you to our new blog, found here.  You can also follow Eating Disorder Hope on Facebook for up-to-date articles, resources, and support for eating disorders and access our website at www.eatingdisorderhope.com.  We thank you for your patience during this time and hope you will continue to choose Eating Disorder Hope for your one stop resource for eating disorder treatment information and recovery tools.  We look forward to continually serving you!  Thank you for being a friend of Eating Disorder Hope.

Blessings,
Eating Disorder Hope

Tuesday, June 05, 2012

Overcoming and healing from Trauma

If you or someone you love has experienced trauma, it may seem difficult to imagine a life with joy and peace after suffering something so painful. It is likely that you may feel disconnected or unable to reclaim your life. How do you put all the pieces back together after a trauma experience? Eating disorders, though self-destructive, delusively create a sense of safety and relief from pain, which is a way that many individuals seek alleviation from the anguish associated with their trauma experience. Dr. Kim Dennis, medical director for Timberline Knolls, shares invaluable advice from her personal experience and knowledge of the recovery journey from trauma. She explains how taking action and learning how to engage mind and body helps break the disassociation that often results from a traumatic experience, which is commonly the root of eating disorders and addictions. She also disuccses how healing does not occur in isolation but rather, in a community connecting with others who are able to guide, encourage, and support. To learn more about the healing journey from trauma and the connection with eating disorders, please listen to this podcast with Dr. Kim Dennis on Your Life After Trauma with Michele Rosenthal.

Wednesday, May 30, 2012

Hunger for Hope: Sex and Skinny Conference


Women today are facing various obstacles that can challenge their ability to thrive and flourish.  Some of these struggles include eating disorders, trauma, and body image issues.  With the startling statistics that reveal how three out of four women have eating issues, and one out of four women has experienced sexual abuse, that chances that you or someone you love has been affected in this way are likely.  The good news is that there is hope for healing and recovery, and the prospect of achieving wholeness and wellness again is possible-no matter the circumstance.  Thankfully, there are several helpful resources available that promote recovery for those affected by these disorders. 

FINDINGbalance, a leading Christian resource for eating and body image issues, in conjunction with its sponsors, including Timberline Knolls Residential Treatment Center, are holding a special conference that address these specific types of issues.  Hungry for Hope: Sex and Skinny, will be held June 21-24, 2012 at Gen Eyrie in Colorado Springs.  This important conference will address spiritual teachings that promote a healing path for recovery from the common issues that women today might struggle with, including anorexia, bulimia, exercise addiction, and trauma.  Designed as a retreat to inspire, encourage, and equip sufferers, professionals, and community members alike, this special event is not one to be missed! To learn more about the Hungry for Hope Event or to register for this conference, please continue reading here.

Thursday, May 17, 2012

Eating Disorders in Adulthood


Because of the many stereotypes that are created about eating disorders, often through the distorted perception of the media, it can be generalized that eating disorders only affect young adolescent females.  However, this couldn’t be farther from the truth.  Eating Disorders can develop during times of transition or significant life changes, which can instigate feelings of vulnerability or emotional stress.  Adulthood often entails considerable transitional time periods, such as the birth of a child, children leaving the home, martial problems or the death of family members or friends, to name a few examples.  If a woman or a man is unable to cope with the emotions that may arise during these difficult life events, they may become susceptible to developing an eating disorder.

If you or someone you love is concerned about eating disorder habits, please read this article to learn more about adult eating disorders.  If an eating disorder is developing or progressing, it is important to be aware of the signs for early detection and treatment, such as increased amount of time spent exercising or engaging in extreme dieting, changes in social functioning, or drastic weight changes.  The keys for establishing freedom from an eating disorder are recognition, acceptance and reaching out for help. There is always hope for recovery from an eating disorder, no matter what your age or period of life you may be in. 

Wednesday, May 16, 2012

Understanding Co-Occurring Disorders


Dual-diagnoses are common in individuals struggling with addictive type illness, such as an eating disorder or substance abuse.  This means that if you or a loved one is recovering from an addictive disorder, you may also be at risk for developing a co-occurring issue, such as drug abuse, self-harm, or sexual addiction, that needs to be addressed to get to the root of the problem.  Research has shown that eating disorders, in specific, have the potential to create alterations in the brain’s reward system, which can increase the risk of other addictive illnesses developing, such as substance abuse. Commonalities to both substance abuse and eating disorders include compulsivity around addictive behaviors, feelings of powerlessness and unmanageability.  Also, having a family history of addictive disorders or history of trauma are overlapping factors that can also contribute to an increased risk.

Treatment options for co-occurring disorders include various forms of psychotherapy, music therapy, movement therapy, medication management, and individual/family therapy.  Other helpful models for recovery from co-occurring disorders include the 12 Step Program, which reinforces the necessary steps to take to overcome addiction and encourage overall wholesomeness.  Comprehensive treatment will ensure that any co-occurring issues that may be unresolved or hidden behind an eating disorder will be properly addressed to promote healing and recovery.  Learn more insight about this topic by listening to this blog talk radio post.

Friday, May 04, 2012

Imagine Me Beyond What You See


Creativity: a beautiful way to promote and foster positive body image and recovery from eating disorders. Simple, but profound. Through art and expression, individuals can explore and externalize their hopes, fears, goals, and ideas. The International Association of Eating Disorders Professionals (iaedp) recently hosted the 2nd annual International Body Image Art Contest for professionals and individuals. To see the winner “She is a Tree of Life” (as well as honorable mentions) you can follow the press release—Imagine Me Beyond What You See.

Written by Rachel Bailey

Thursday, April 12, 2012

Identifying a Loved One May Be Struggling with Bulimia

New Dawn Treatment Center

It is difficult to come to terms with any kind of health concern that a friend or family member suffers.  This difficulty is doubled when the suffering individual may not have acknowledged their own condition yet.  When that health condition may be an eating disorder, it can be a delicate subject to bring up, that requires respectful and caring discussion with the individual. The article Identifying a Loved One May Be Struggling with Bulimia is a great resource to consider if you are looking for some direction on how to handle your concerns about someone who may have bulimia.

Tuesday, April 10, 2012

Timberline Knolls Residential Treatment Center Names Hariclia Hristea, MD as Staff Psychiatrist

 
A treatment center is valued for the quality of its staff and treatment.  Get to know the leaders of an eating disorder treatment center and you will see the trickle down effect of their character, professionalism and devotion to the field in the doctors, nurses, therapists and support staff of the treatment center.  Many treatment centers offer a wide array of useful treatments for eating disorders, such as cognitive behavior therapy, dialectic behavior therapy, equine therapy, etc. but only a few treatment centers offer the commitment to excellence in their staff that Timberline Knolls does.  Please join us in warmly welcoming Dr. Hariclia Hristea to the staff of Timberline Knolls Resident Treatment Center.

Read the press release at:  http://www.prnewswire.com/news-releases/timberline-knolls-residential-treatment-center-names-hariclia-hristea-md-as-staff-psychiatrist-146813835.html

Monday, April 09, 2012

Eating Disorder Hope is honored to announce that Ranch 2300 is now listed in our exclusive National Eating Disorder Specialist Library


Residential treatment for eating disorders and related conditions (addiction, depression, anxiety, etc) is scarce in Texas.  Yet the need is great.  That is why we are particularly excited to announce that Ranch 2300 has opened, just outside of Lubbock, and is offering premiere treatment for anorexia, bulimia, binge eating disorder and co-occurring disorders.  We hope you will check out Ranch 2300 and help us welcome their needed services to Texas!

Friday, March 30, 2012

Vogue Mom Encourages Daughter to Lose Weight: Helpful or Harmful Approach?

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We are constantly bombarded with messages from the media that we should be thin and lean, and preferably, look like one of the models in magazines, on TV, on billboards, etc.  Sadly, many kids face this pressure at home, too.  Well meaning parents, alarmed by concern about their child's weight and health, often resort to imposed food restriction and diets to help their child "be healthy", "fit in", etc.

This can be problematic because once dieting and food restriction are enforced, it is not uncommon for the child to then develop a tormented relationship with food that can lead to eating disorders, body image disturbances and depression.

On that note, please read Dr. Kimberly Dennis' thoughts about the recent controversy over the Vogue mother's efforts to help her daughter lose weight

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Saturday, March 24, 2012

Make a Pledge to Honor Yourself over Spring Break


The emerging Spring Season beckons a fresh start, new beginnings, and a long awaited relief from winter’s blues.  Many students across the country look forward to this season in particular, due to the much anticipated Spring Break.  However, if you are struggling with an eating disorder or valiantly attempting to stay the course in your recovery, this time may bring more challenges than feelings of hope.  Often associated with Spring Break is an incessant need for dieting, a pressing urge to attain an unrealistic standard of body perfection to fill the molds of bikinis and bathing suits.  While spring break is intended to be a time of relaxation and rest, for many it alternately becomes a destructive period of crash dieting, binges, and depression episodes.  This spring break set yourself up for success by committing to honor yourself, your body, and your recovery, refusing to give into the “I’ve got to lose weight before Spring Break” mentality.  Consider signing the Spring Break Pledge 2012, choosing to approach this spring break in healthier ways!

What is something positive you can do for yourself over your spring break?

Wednesday, March 21, 2012

Eating Disorder Hope is now on Pinterest!

At Eating Disorder Hope, we advocate the promotion of eating disorder awareness and recovery.  Our recent involvement in Pinterest has allowed us to display important facets of this mission, such as positive affirmations, beautiful body image inspirations, and encouragement for the recovery journey.  This comes at a crucial time, particularly as social media is increasingly utilized as a means of negatively deterring the hope for recovery.  As a counteract to the "thinspo" promotions on Pinterest, Eating Disorder Hope welcomes you to follow and share our Pinterest page and associated boards to help spread the message of hope and freedom that is found in recovery.

Please check out our Pinterest Page at: http://pinterest.com/edhope/

What are you doing to spread the message of recovery today?

Thursday, March 15, 2012

Enter Drawing to Win Free Book : Happy For the Rest of Your Life by Gregory Jantz, Ph.D.


Happiness can seem elusive as we go through the challenges of life.  It sometimes seems that once we attain this next big "thing" we will be happy.  The thing may be acceptance to college, a job, a certain weight, a relationship, etc.  But, the truth is happiness is an inside out deal, and Dr. Jantz addresses the tools of finding inner happiness beautifully in his book Happy For the Rest of Your Life.

Dr. Jantz has generously donated 10 copies of Happy for the Rest of Your Life to be offered in a drawing on April 15th, 2012.  Enter Here


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Wednesday, March 14, 2012

How to help a friend with an eating disorder | Fox News

Dr. Kim Dennis @ Timberline Knolls
Residential Treatment Center

  It can be heart wrenching to watch a friend or loved one suffer with anorexia, bulimia or binge eating disorder.  You may want to reach out, offer support and encouragement, but don't because you fear offending them.

Here are some excellent tips on how to approach a friend and discuss your concerns about their disordered eating behaviors @ How to help a friend with an eating disorder | Fox News

Anorexia and College Students

Many young women and men struggle with eating disorders.  It can be difficult to  cope with major life changes, such as attending college.  Sometimes, students will turn to food, exercise, weight obsession, restricting, etc. in an effort to deal with the pressures of college life.  This article provides some great insight into why this is the case for some and what can be done about it @ http://www.eatingdisorderhope.com/article_anorexia-and-college-students

Monday, March 05, 2012

Health at Every Size Webinar Presented by International Assoc. of Eating Disorder Professionals(iaedp) and Timberline Knolls


Presented by Juliet Zuercher, RD, Nutrition Coordinator at Timberline Knolls

Date: Wednesday, March 14, 2012

Time: 1 p.m. CST / 2 p.m. EST / 11 a.m. PST


Register Now

A presentation discussing the benefits of focusing on healthy lifestyle practices rather than weight as a measurement of overall well being. The current cultural focus on restrictive eating, dieting and other weight centered behaviors are challenged and healthier long term solutions are explored.

Wednesday, February 29, 2012

An Illness, Not an Act: Eating Disorder Sufferers Need Treatment

by Staff of Rogers Memorial Hospital


When Christina Ricci revealed her history of anorexia on a talk show last month, she became the latest public face of a devastating disorder that all too often claims its victims in private. On the Jan. 20 episode of The Talk, the Pan Am actress, now 31, said she suffered from anorexia nervosa for a year and a half when she was a teenager. Like too many other women and girls, as well as men and boys, she had become obsessed with the unrealistic beauty standards of her industry and starved herself in a vain attempt to achieve them.

Thankfully, through therapy, Ricci was able to conquer her eating disorder and resume living a healthy and happy life, as well as continuing the successful career she could have lost. She now cautions others who might be experiencing similar feelings of obsession to seek help before they lose control and succumb to an eating disorder.

Everybody Knows Somebody
Although millions of people know Ricci from her work in television and film, millions more know someone personally with an eating disorder, possibly even themselves. Few of these sufferers admit their disorder as publicly as Ricci – and too many of them fail to admit the problem to anyone until it’s too late – but they all need the same care and compassion in conquering their disorder that Ricci received. No matter who they are, or what age, those suffering from eating disorders such as anorexia, bulimia and binge eating do not need to suffer in silence. 

And they are not alone. In fact, “Everybody Knows Somebody” with an eating disorder, according to the National Eating Disorders Association, which sponsors an annual National Eating Disorders Awareness Week. The goal of Everybody Knows Somebody Week, which runs this year from Feb. 26 through March 3, is to find help for the 10 million women and 1 million men in the United States battling anorexia and bulimia – plus the millions more who suffer from a binge-eating disorder – and also to educate their families and friends.

Although NEDA, doctors, therapists, healthcare professionals, concerned family members and friends work tirelessly all year to inform people about eating disorders and offer support, myths and misinformation persist. Everybody knows somebody with an eating disorder; however, not everybody knows the underlying reasons for these disorders or how best to treat them.

A Mental Illness, Not a Choice
It is important to understand that an eating disorder is not a fad or lifestyle choice, but rather a mental illness with serious, potentially life-threatening consequences. With anorexia, the symptoms include abnormally slow heart rate and low blood pressure; reduction of bone density; muscle loss and weakness; severe dehydration; fainting, fatigue and overall weakness; dry hair and skin, and even hair loss. Bulimia can lead to irregular heartbeats, gastric rupture, tooth decay and staining, chronic irregular bowel movements and constipation, peptic ulcers and pancreatitis. Binge eating can result in high blood pressure, high cholesterol levels, heart disease and gallbladder disease. The common thread in all these disorders is that all require treatment.

Although an eating disorder may involve a preoccupation with food, weight, calories or exercise, it is also about something more deep-seated, from a need for control to a need to be accepted and loved. The underlying biological, psychological and sociological causes of an eating disorder need to be identified and addressed for successful treatment.

Eating disorders are too complex to be generalized or oversimplified, and the causes and symptoms are not always identical from one sufferer to the next. Although it would be easy to blame the entertainment and fashion industries for perpetuating a thin, unrealistic body type as an ideal, aspirational standard, they are not alone in perpetuating the conditions that result in an eating disorder.

Low self-esteem, depression, anxiety, substance abuse, genetics, influences from family and peer groups, and numerous other factors can all contribute to an individual’s obsession with weight or appearance. How a person manifests an eating disorder can also vary widely, including starving, inducing vomiting and exercising beyond the point of exhaustion.

Perhaps the biggest misconception of all is that only women suffer from eating disorders; in actuality, more than 10 percent of all cases are men. Like women, men of all ages are confronted with unattainable body images in the culture, and they, too, can experience any number of physical, emotional and social issues than can manifest in a disorder. 

Help Is Available
As Ricci’s story illustrates, the millions of people suffering from anorexia, bulimia or a binge-eating disorder should seek professional help to conquer their disorders. Fortunately, NEDA and its partner facilities offer a wide array of proven, evidence-based treatment services to sufferers and their families to fight these disorders before it’s too late. These services include inpatient care, therapy sessions, support groups, and nutritional and medical monitoring for women and men.

At a NEDA facility such as Rogers Memorial Hospital in Oconomowoc, Wis. – the first provider in the nation to offer exclusive eating disorders treatment for men and boys – the goal of the treatment is threefold:
1. Nutritional Stability: This is the first priority in treatment. The goal is for patients to achieve abstinence from cycles of binge eating and purging and other eating disordered behaviors, as well as restoring and maintaining a healthy body weight. 
2. Changes in Thinking: Through group therapy sessions, patients identify and correct errors in thinking, such as body image distortions, perfectionism or a drive for thinness. Changes in thinking patterns and habits are necessary to maintain nutritional improvements.
3. Obstacles to Recovery: Patients identify ways to overcome barriers and build confidence using newly acquired coping and self-care skills. Eating disorder symptoms can be more severe for those struggling with a co-occurring anxiety illness like obsessive-compulsive disorder.

From Hollywood to the Heartland, anyone with an eating disorder needs everyone’s help to defeat it. If you think you might have an eating disorder, or if you know someone who does, please contact the Eating Disorder Center at Rogers Memorial Hospital at 800-767-4411, or visit www.rogershospital.org

Last reviewed: By Jacquelyn Ekern, MS, LPC on 8 February, 2012
Published on EatingDisorderHope.com.

Tuesday, February 28, 2012

The Object of Comfort: a Butterflies Process is a Journey

Dr. Deborah A Russo
Clinical Psychologist
Remuda Ranch Treatment Programs

As a mom of toddler twins and a five year old, emotional ups and downs are a daily reality.   When my last minute nerves are just about fried, I take a deep breath and remind myself that I am a mirror for them.  My own emotional regulation affects theirs.  When I talk slowly and calmly, I notice they calm as well.  Sometimes they calm in a moment, other times longer as they work it out within themselves, and we figure out together what they need.  

Each child has his or her their own unique way of dealing with their emotional and relational world.  One recovers quickly from upset; one will discharge into humor, and the other holds on to things like they just stick to him.  Deep thinking and sensitive, he has been this way since I can remember seeing his personality at 4 months old.  My children soothe differently as well.  One reaches for a worn teddy bear, one a sock monkey, and the other a silky blue blanket. One wants a hug to help ground himself, and another needs a few minutes alone. 

My precious children make me think about the precious young people I work with as they make their way to find their needed soothing objects to healthfully cope with aching hearts and souls.  I remember one story in particular of a young woman as she  worked hard in coming to terms with letting go of her eating disorder, grieving,  finding the pieces to the puzzle  of her trauma background and bringing words to the reasons for her pain and anguish.  She also struggled with cutting. Since she was a teenager she recalled being unable to soothe herself, to redirect her mind in another way.  It was her object of comfort. 

In therapy, she worked hard to first reduce self harming, and then succeeded to completely stopping with only few weekly thoughts that she was able to manage with healthy tools.  She opened her world to loving people and to self love.   But, she was still afraid to let go of the self harm object that she had by her side for years.   She said that she kept it in her back pack.  What else do you have in that bag?, I asked.    Anything else that is comforting?  Well not really, books, stuff for school, she said.

We talked about the power she gave to that object- its’ presence was an illusion of safety.
I know now it is not helpful to me, she reflected.   But, there is still somehow comfort.  I understood better than ever before as she spoke.  If I let it go, really let it go, it is like a relationship.  One that seems to help me survive, but actually keeps me from all my possibilities.

We talked about what she could add to her backpack that would be comforting. She needed a replacement to symbolize the true comfort that a consistent, loving and non judgmental relationship could bring.  I thought about the numbers of times per week one of my children cries.. Boo hoo, mommy, Ouchy! – as they run over to show me their wounds.  There is no blood, no visible wound for me to know for sure if they need first aid.  I know that a mommy’s kiss helps mend that moment of anxiety or fear or just that need for touch, love, reassurance, or distraction.  This young woman never had that.  She could not recall one memory, or one moment of being held or protected.  
Band-Aids, how about Band-Aids?, I said.  Would you be willing to add them into your backpack?  Let’s talk about some other things that would help you….,

She began to talk about all the ways she felt like people cared. We reviewed her lifeline of memories of true support.  First was when a friend realized that she was self harming and was concerned, but did not judge her.…. It was when someone noticed what I needed, she said.    I replied, So if someone notices that you carry this harming object, would they see what you needed for yourself through their concern?

Now was the point of contemplation of letting go of that security blanket ….    What would it be like to walk free of the object you depended on for all those years?   All it represented?    Would you have to lose those meaningful things as well?   

We addressed what it is like to see herself letting go of this, putting other things in her back pack to replace it. I have something!   I see it!  I can visualize it! she said.  A friend gave me a Butterfly – I sometimes hold it at night, it is soft and squishy.   The colors always remind me of warmth and hope. 

A butterfly is delicate and powerful at the same time and it must come out of its cocoon when it is time, no sooner.  The butterfly was given by someone who understands her and never judged her...  You are  like the butterfly and it is more then the butterfly, but what it represents to you, the persons who gets you, comforts you and cares for you …     Yes, that is protection to me, she said. I can carry a Band-Aid. I like that, it makes sense to me.   We smiled together.

Many individuals struggle with the battle against an eating disorder, and self harming behaviors.  If you struggle as well, you are not alone and deserve to find the help you need.  Seek counsel and open yourself up to taking the risk of letting others in.   With the support you need, learn about why you self harm and why you suffer.  

Letting go of old things, bad relationships or old behaviors to provide the feeling of security is a multi leveled process.   It isn’t human nature to let go of all our old security blankets at once.  In our humanness we may hold on to things for years…..   Like fingers hanging on to a cliff, holding on for dear life and fear of the fall.   But you must figure, what are all those things you may hold on to that don’t really serve you in the long run….  Will they get you to where you want to be in life?   Will they help you achieve your dreams?

We all want to feel in control, and many people suffer with painful thoughts, memories and emotions.  We all feel vulnerable.  Letting go is a process, grieving is also.  Moving on is a gift and a challenge.   It can be scary… whether it is the silky blue blanket, or another object of comfort, it is a journey.  Have you read the Lessons of a Butterfly?, I asked her.  Read it and think of the metaphors for you.  

No one can make your decision how, when and what to challenge and change but you.  However, you do need others to help you figure out how to fly.  

Please Note:  The information contained in this article is intended to provide readers with helpful information and inspiration.  The story has been adjusted to honor and protect confidential details of all individuals. This article is not to be used to diagnose or treat.  Consult licensed medical, and or mental health professionals for assistance.

 


Last reviewed: By Jacquelyn Ekern, MS, LPC on 7 Feb, 2012
Published on EatingDisorderHope.com.

Monday, February 27, 2012

We All Know Somebody But Is There More To The Story?

by Staff of Timberline Knolls Residential Treatment Center


You are 17 years old … your best friend is a brilliant student, but due to financial difficulties in the family, must get a full scholarship to a good school or she won’t be able to attend college. You notice she is getting very thin, never eats lunch with you anymore, and always seems distracted and agitated. You ask her if she is okay; she says everything is fine.  She has changed.  

You are a sophomore in college …your roommate has taken health and fitness to a whole new level.  She gets up at 4 a.m. to run for two hours before her first class; she spends afternoons working out in the gym. Although she always wears a knee brace due to pain, she never stops running. You never talk or laugh together anymore. She has changed.

You married into a tight-knit family …you are very fond of your sister-in-law who has a bit of a rocky marriage and very stressful job. At family get-togethers, she always heads for the bathroom immediately after eating. Lately, she spends a lot of time alone; you see her less and less. She has changed. 

Whether it’s a case of disordered eating or full-blown anorexia, bulimia or binge eating, it’s likely that everybody does know somebody with an eating disorder.  But, here is what everybody is less likely to know about their “somebody”: this woman or girl probably has more than one addiction or disorder or is suffering from some type of trauma. The high school senior is taking diet pills to stay thin and help her study; the college student was raped the previous summer; the sister-in-law suffers from such crippling depression she is afraid one day she will not be able to get out of bed, she will lose her job and her husband will leave her.

Those in the behavioral health field know it is rare, indeed, for woman or girl to only struggle with an eating disorder; frequently, she will have a co-occurring disorder such as substance abuse, trauma, or a mood disorder.
  
What are Co-occurring Disorders?

Trauma

Unfortunately, trauma and traumatic experiences are nothing new to the human condition.  Whether a child is sexually violated early in life, or an adult experiences a horrific car accident, such trauma can and often does have profound and long-term consequences.  Ever increasingly, research indicates a connection between trauma and eating disorders.  Further, the type of trauma plays a role in whether the individual eventually presents with anorexia or bulimia.  Although variations certainly occur, trauma of a catastrophic nature such as severe physical abuse, rape or extreme injury is more likely to be associated with bulimia. Conversely, lesser trauma such as childhood neglect, being bullied or teased, or experiencing alcoholism in the family is often associated with anorexia.  In each instance, the eating disorder behavior allows the individual to suppress unpleasant emotions related to traumatic experience, to have a sense of control over her emotions and to disassociate from the trauma itself. 
 
Substance Abuse

Up to 35% of alcohol or illicit drug abusers have eating disorders compared to only 3% of the general population. Similarly, up to 50% of those with eating disorders have a simultaneous problem with drug or alcohol abuse. It is fairly easy to imagine why a woman or girl with an eating disorder would abuse drugs. If the goal is to be skinny, those with anorexia often become dependent on caffeine, nicotine, diet pills and stimulants such as Adderall to suppress  appetite or speed up metabolism. In time, women and girls may graduate to cocaine, meth and even crack. Similarly, those with bulimia often abuse diuretics, stimulants and laxatives for purging purposes.   
Yet, the connection between these two runs deeper.  At the very heart of the disease, eating disorders are about coping with stress, painful emotions or unpleasant thoughts; drugs and alcohol are often utilized to achieve the same effect. When a woman or girl is high or drunk, her emotional pain is numbed and she might not be as sad, lonely, anxious or depressed. In other words, the function of what both the eating disorder and substance abuse can do for these individuals is similar.
            
Mood Disorders

Mood disorders encompass a wide range of issues including major depression, severe anxiety, post-traumatic stress disorder, bipolar disorder, obsessive compulsive disorder and/or a personality disorder.  It is not uncommon for an individual with anorexia, bulimia or binge eating disorder to also have a mood disorder, particularly depression or anxiety.  In fact, studies indicate a significant connection between mood disorders and eating disorders in families.

Treatment

Once a diagnosis of an eating disorder is made, it is extremely important to identify additional co-occurring disorders. Knowing all that a woman or girl is struggling with is critical when it comes to treatment. Although outpatient therapy is frequently the first step, if significant strides are not apparent, treatment can progress to residential care.  Many programs focus exclusively on the eating disorder. At Timberline Knolls Residential Treatment Center, all disorders and addictions are addressed simultaneously through an integrated treatment approach. Utilizing dialectical behavior therapy (DBT) in combination with 12-step principles has proven highly effective in treating those with multiple diagnoses.     

Recovery

The most important thing for everyone to know is that recovery is entirely possible.  Moreover, the earlier treatment is sought for any disorder or addiction, the better the chance for a complete and lasting recovery.

Reference
National Center on Addiction and Substance Abuse (CASA) at Columbia University. (2003).Food for Thought: Substance Abuse and Eating Disorders. New York, National Center on Addiction and Substance Abuse.

Last reviewed: By Jacquelyn Ekern, MS, LPC on 8 February, 2012
Published on EatingDisorderHope.com.