Eating
Disorders
Individuals With Eating Disorders Up to Five
Times Likelier to Abuse Alcohol And Illicit Drugs
New CASA Report First Comprehensive
Analysis of Link Between Substance Abuse And Eating Disorders
(Dec. 18, 2003) -- Food for Thought: Substance Abuse and Eating
Disorders -- the first comprehensive examination of the link between
substance abuse and eating disorders -- reveals that up to one-half of
individuals with eating disorders abuse alcohol or illicit drugs, compared to
nine percent of the general population. Conversely, up to 35 percent of alcohol
or illicit drug abusers have eating disorders compared to three percent of the
general population. The 73-page report by The National Center on Addiction and
Substance Abuse (CASA) at Columbia University was released today by CASA
president and former U.S. Secretary of Health, Education and Welfare, Joseph A.
Califano, Jr.
"For many young women, eating
disorders like anorexia and bulimia are joined at the hip with smoking,
binge drinking and illicit drug use," said Califano. "This lethal
link between substance abuse and eating disorders sends a signal to parents,
teachers and health professionals -- where you see the smoke of eating
disorders, look for the fire of substance abuse and vice versa."
The exhaustive report finds anorexia nervosa and
bulimia nervosa as the eating
disorders most commonly linked to substance abuse and for the first time
identifies the shared risk factors and shared characteristics of both
afflictions.
Substance Abuse and Eating Disorders
Shared Risk Factors
- Occur in times of transition or stress
- Common brain chemistry
- Common family history
- Low self esteem, depression, anxiety, impulsivity
- History of sexual or physical abuse
- Unhealthy parental behaviors and low monitoring of children's activities
- Unhealthy peer norms and social pressures
- Susceptibility to messages from advertising and entertainment media
Shared Characteristics
- Obsessive preoccupation, craving, compulsive behavior, secretiveness,
rituals
- Experience mood altering effects, social isolation
- Linked to other psychiatric disorders, suicide
- Difficult to treat, life threatening
- Chronic diseases with high relapse rates
- Require intensive therapy
The report lists caffeine, tobacco, alcohol, diuretics, laxatives, emetics,
amphetamines, cocaine and heroin as substances used to suppress appetite,
increase metabolism, purge unwanted calories and self-medicate negative
emotions.
The report found that because health professionals often overlook the link
between substance abuse and eating disorders, treatment options are virtually
nonexistent for these co-occurring conditions.
"The public health community, parents and policy makers must educate
our children about healthy body images from a very young age, and treatment and
prevention programs must address the common co-occurrence of substance abuse
and eating disorders," stated Susan Foster, vice president and director of
policy research and analysis at CASA, who spearheaded the project.
"Advertisers put children at greater risk of developing an eating
disorder through the portrayal of unrealistic body images," noted Mr.
Califano. "The average American woman is 5'4" tall and weighs
approximately 140 pounds, but the average model that purportedly epitomizes our
standard of beauty is 5'11" tall and weighs 117 pounds." The report
found that women's magazines contain more than ten times more ads and articles
related to weight loss than men's magazines, which is the same gender ratio
reported for eating disorders.
The report finds that while only 15 percent of girls are overweight, 40
percent of girls in grades one through five and 62 percent of teenage girls are
trying to lose weight. These girls are especially vulnerable to eating
disorders and related substance abuse problems.
Other notable findings include:
- Middle school girls (10 - 14 year olds) who diet more than once a week are
nearly four times likelier to become smokers.
- Girls with eating disorder symptoms are almost four times likelier to use
inhalants and cocaine.
- 12.6 percent of female high school students take diet pills, powders or
liquids to control their weight without a doctor's advice.
- Bulimic women who are alcohol dependent report a higher rate of suicide
attempts, anxiety, personality and conduct disorders and other drug dependence
than bulimic women who are not alcohol dependent.
- Hispanic girls are slightly more likely than Caucasian girls and
significantly more likely than African-American girls to report having fasted
for 24 hours or more and having vomited or taken laxatives to lose weight.
- As many as one million men and boys suffer from an eating disorder; gay and
bisexual males are at increased risk of such disorders.
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