Overeating Replaced with Other Compulsive Behaviors
(November 27, 2006) -- For an emerging number of weight-loss surgery
patients, giving up comfort food means guzzling Southern Comfort.
Or hitting the mall instead of McDonald's, even though creditors are
calling.
Researchers call this behavioral shift "addiction transfer," which means
swapping one
compulsive act, such as
overeating, with another in an attempt to numb emotions or fill an inner
void. And mental-health experts say that because bariatric procedures have
become more common -- and patients more candid -- they're seeing increased
cases of
alcoholism,
obsessive shopping, gambling and promiscuity.
After the euphoria of rapid weight loss fades, a harsh reality appears:
Life is still tough even if you can fit in an airplane seat.
"The problem is that many people who have surgery haven't been in therapy
to address the issues behind their
eating disorder," says Kathryn Friedman Sloan, a licensed mental-health
counselor in Palm Beach Gardens. "Most of them are emotional eaters, and
when you take that away, they're left with 'what do I do with my
emotions?'?"
An upcoming Bariatric Times article focuses on addiction transfer.
"It's probably been about the last year and a half to two years that it's
been coming out in the research," says coauthor Cynthia Alexander, a
psychologist at Cleveland Clinic Florida. "We've started warning people that
they have to be on the lookout. I've stepped up what I do in support groups
and through education so that this doesn't happen to our patients.
"There are millions of people who've had surgery who are dealing with
this and want to bring it to light."
Gastric-bypass poster child Carnie Wilson, for example, appeared on Oprah
last month to say she'd become an alcoholic two years after her highly
publicized operation in 1999. With
binge eating gone as a coping mechanism, the singer started drinking up
to 10 martinis a day to soothe stress. Although she'd lost 150 pounds, the
negative feelings that fueled her obesity still lurked.
"I'm here to get the message out that after you've had surgery, you need
to focus on what's in your head," she said, adding that it's not always
possible to "solve it all" before going under the knife because many
morbidly obese people face life-threatening illnesses that mandate weight
loss now, therapy later.
Another woman on the show, who lost 200 pounds, revealed that she started
having affairs as a way to distract herself from an unhappy marriage. "Being
thin was supposed to be the answer to all my problems," she said. "But then
you finally achieve that goal, and everything is not all better. It came as
such a shock."
That light-bulb moment, counselors say, can trigger depression that some
post-operative patients try to medicate with liquor, shopping or cigarettes.
And for many,
depression
is what brought them to a bariatric surgeon's office in the first place.
There's another paradox: The positive step of dropping pounds can be
stressful in itself.
"Dynamics change after you start reducing weight and putting the next
foot forward," says psychologist Melodie Moorehead, the other author of the
upcoming Bariatric Times article.
"Relationships can shift as you put more balance in your life. You may
have to retrain your boss that you're not working 65 hours a week or retrain
family members that you're taking better care of yourself.
"Perhaps, for the first time, you're going out on dates or playing soccer
or doing a number of things to round out your lifestyle," says Moorehead,
who works with patients at JFK Medical Center in Atlantis. "All of this
requires adjustment."
In other words, weight-loss surgery alters more than a person's pant
size.
John Hoffmann, a construction project manager, has lost nearly 200 pounds
since his operation in April.
"I started dealing with some anxiety issues about two months ago," he
says. "But with therapy and medication, I'm doing better. I don't care how
prepared you are for this, when I talk to people about it, I compare it to
drug addicts and alcoholics. The things you were eating over are going to
get to you eventually."
Experts emphasize that bariatric surgery doesn't cause addiction, which
Alexander and Moorehead state in their article.
"It seems to make sense," they write, "that if a person has a high
addiction factor before surgery and is turning to food for reasons other
than nutrition, (then) after surgery .?.?. the disease of addiction can show
up in another form."
Wilson echoed their point on Oprah.
"The weight-loss surgery didn't cause me to be an alcoholic," said the
singer, who quit drinking two years ago. "I'm a born addict."
This is why Dr. Philip Schauer, president of the American Society for
Bariatric Surgery, takes issue with linking addiction to the operating room.
"This has just come up out of nowhere," says Schauer, who works at the
Cleveland Clinic in Ohio. "Bariatric surgery has been around for 30 years.
It is true that some people before surgery have a predilection toward
addiction. But transfer addiction has been sort of made up. There's no real
psychological evidence that that's what's happening."
Mental-health workers say that all you have to do is attend a support
group or click on an anonymous chat room to discover otherwise. However, the
stigma of addiction, like that of obesity, keeps many patients from
admitting they're in trouble.
New research suggests that the biochemical causes of compulsive behavior
-- be it overeating, alcoholism or drug addiction -- are remarkably similar.
The Wall Street Journal reported in July that scores of clinical trials on
addiction are under way at the National Institutes of Health, and many of
the drugs being studied target multiple behaviors.
For now, experts say, the addiction-transfer issue is awareness.
"If you're having a drink now and then, it might not be a
problem," Alexander says. "But if you find it's steadily escalating, take
notice of that and get help early.
"Call any psychologist. Call the number on the back of your insurance
card for a referral. Call the mental-health hot line at 211. There's help
out there for developing other ways to deal with stress and emotions."
Source: New York Times Syndicate
Last updated: 11/06
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