Eating
Disorders
New Residential Treatment Program for Eating
Disorders Shows Promise
Anna Westin uses holistic approach to eating disorders
treatment
(Jan. 4, 2004) -- More than 10 million people in the United States suffer
from eating disorders. Because of the complex causes of these diseases, they
are challenging to overcome and difficult for professionals to treat.
Individuals with eating disorders, such as anorexia nervosa and bulimia,
typically are treated with psychotherapy, medication and behavorial therapy.
Unfortunately, a consistently effective and successful therapeutic approach has
not been identified. Therefore, many people fight their disorders for years.
Treating the whole person
A new residential treatment approach is showing promise. The Anna Westin
House was born through the teamwork of many institutions, including The Anna
Westin Foundation, Eating Disorders Institute at Methodist Hospital, Blue Cross
and Blue Shield of Minnesota, Mayo Clinic, the University of Minnesota
Department of Psychiatry, Emily Program and the University of Minnesota's
Center for Spirituality and Healing. Anna Westin is a new residential treatment
center in Chaska, Minnesota that treats the whole person mind, body and
spirit.
Interdisciplinary caregivers call upon a wide range of skills and knowledge
to facilitate healing for the residents, women ranging in age from 14 to 50
(females make up the vast majority of people with eating disorders). In
addition to the standard care for people with eating disorders
nutritional counseling, nursing, medical and psychiatric services
residents at Anna Westin see a traditional Chinese medicine practitioner,
benefit from massage, practice yoga, participate in art and dance therapies,
and receive both individual and group spiritual counseling.
Twice a week, residents see a traditional Chinese medicine specialist, who
uses acupuncture and acupressure to correct energy imbalances that may be
underlying factors in patients' eating disorders. The specialist also teaches
residents how to use self-acupressure to help with nausea or to decrease
anxiety. Patients report such practices do help relieve anxiety, sleeping
troubles, upset stomachs and constipation.
Similarly, Anna Westin residents learn exercise routines and breathing
techniques during yoga classes to relax their bodies. If someone is having
trouble sleeping or feeling anxious, she can use relaxing yoga postures or
breathing techniques to fall asleep instead of taking sleeping pills.
Residents also use massage and dance therapies to help regain an accurate
sense of their bodies. People with eating disorders believe they're obese when,
in reality, they are starving to death. They don't have a healthy sense of
their body. Massage teaches those with eating disorders to start feeling their
bodies again, to learn what feels good, and to listen to their body cues. The
therapist also teaches patients how to use self-massage for reducing anxiety,
how to articulate their own physical sensations, and how to set healthy and
safe boundaries for touch. Dance allows residents to rediscover their bodies
through self-directed movement and exploration of spatial relationships.
"We believe that by approaching individuals challenged with eating
disorders from a holistic point of view and by empowering them to use non-drug
tools and behaviors, individuals can begin to heal from the inside out,"
says Karen Lawson, M.D., DABHM, director of Integrative Clinical Services at
the Center for Spirituality and Healing at the University of Minnesota.
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