Eating Disorders Treatment Options For Men, Boys Lacking
As Number of Male Patients Rises, Research and Diagnosis Remain Focused
on Females
(April 17, 2007) -- For years, Brad Huffaker
obsessively exercised, up to
five hours a day. Then he
stopped eating for up to 12 hours a day.
Eventually, he began gorging each evening on
any food he could find in the
house and making himself vomit it all back up -- a cycle he repeated up to
eight times throughout the night.
Finally, last summer, Mr. Huffaker realized he had an
eating disorder and
needed help. But after scouring the Internet and researching 20 in-patient
facilities, he found only one that specialized in
treating men. Mr. Huffaker,
a 24-year-old in Knoxville , Tenn. , says finding a male-focused center was
important because he felt ashamed dealing openly with his problem in front
of women. "It's much easier for me to eat in front of guys," he says.
How They Differ
Some distinctive ways men may manifest eating
disorders:
• Shape-oriented, rather than weight-oriented,
focusing on a certain body type.
• Unhappy with body from the waist up, not waist
down.
• Dieting for specific reasons, such as athletic
performance.
Source: Arnold Andersen,
University of Iowa , Iowa City |
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Even amid a growing understanding of the incidence of
eating disorders in
men and boys, experts say there is a dearth of treatment options for male
patients. Only a handful of residential treatment centers have programs that
focus on men and boys. Many centers are reluctant to treat men at all. And
there has been virtually no research done on males with
anorexia or
bulimia.
Because these conditions are still considered female problems, even the
criteria for identifying eating disorders are female-oriented. The
diagnostic guidelines many professionals use include questions about
menstruation and female body image. There are efforts to change these
guidelines to be more inclusive of men's issues. But eating-disorder experts
and male patients say the current lack of treatment programs has a profound
impact on the chances of recovery.
For many years, conventional wisdom held that one-tenth of patients with
eating disorders were male. But in February -- in the first national survey
of eating disorders -- Harvard researchers reported that males represent as
many as one-quarter of anorexia and bulimia patients and close to 40% of
binge eaters. That would mean 300,000 men in the U.S. over 18 get anorexia
at some point in their lives, and two million become
binge eaters, the
researchers say. No one knows if the numbers of male eating-disorder
patients are actually growing, or if more men and boys are simply coming
forward to seek treatment. But the few programs that specialize in men say
they are seeing increased enrollment.
Both males and females with eating disorders experience similar
biological and psychological problems, say experts. But men and boys often
manifest their symptoms differently. While females obsess over calories and
weight, males typically focus on
muscle and body fat. Mr. Huffaker, who is 6
feet 7 inches tall and got down to 180 pounds, liked that he had defined
muscles, taut skin and just 5% body fat.
Unlike females, males have a variety of
body images they may be trying to
obtain. "Some want to be wiry like Mick Jagger; some want to be lean like
David Beckham, and some want to be really buff and bulked, like Arnold
Schwarzenegger," says psychiatrist Arnold Andersen, director of the
eating-disorders program at the University of Iowa in Iowa City .
The stigma of having an eating disorder can be even greater for males
than for females, which typically makes them even more reluctant to seek
treatment. "Society sees this as a girl's disease," says Lynn Grefe, chief
executive of the National Eating Disorders Association, a Seattle-based
nonprofit. "If a guy suffers, he's embarrassed."
Researchers at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill reviewed
clinical trials for eating disorders conducted between 1980 and 2005, and
the findings -- recently published by the International Journal of Eating
Disorders -- are striking: The 32 clinical trials for anorexia included 816
females and 23 males; 47 studies of bulimia looked at 2,985 females and 69
males; 26 studies of binge eating disorder included 1,008 females and 87
males. The eight medication studies on anorexia included 293 females and
only one male.
"We have abandoned men," says Cynthia Bulik, one of the authors of the
review and director of the eating-disorder program at the University of
North Carolina at Chapel Hill .
In the primary handbook for diagnosing mental disorders -- the fourth
edition of the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, known
as the DSM-IV -- the criteria to assess for anorexia involve female-specific
traits, such as amenorrhea, or menstrual irregularity.
Experts say that the screening tests developed by researchers for the
disorders are gender-biased, too. "Most questions are designed with female
concerns in mind," says Dr. Andersen. " 'Do you worry about hips?' 'Do your
thighs jiggle?' Instead of, 'Do you worry about muscle?' "
In response, several experts, including Dr. Andersen, are developing
gender-neutral screening tests. And there is a committee being formed by the
American Psychiatric Association to examine the eating-disorder criteria in
the DSM-IV and determine what should be revised in the next edition --
DSM-V, to be published in 2012. That committee is likely to look at gender
differences, says William E. Narrow, DSM-V task force research director.
Because of the lack of gender-specific research, eating-disorder experts
say they have no proof that the treatment for males should differ from that
for females. A successful regimen of care is often individualized and
involves psychotherapy, family therapy and antidepressants.
"The bigger problem arises if the male patient needs to be treated in a
group setting," says B. Timothy Walsh, a psychiatrist and director of the
eating-disorders research unit at the New York State Psychiatric Institute
at Columbia University Medical Center in New York City . "It can be
difficult for a young man if he is the only one going through the process
with a group of young women."
Mark Grennell experienced this first hand. As a teenager, he began
restricting his food, in an effort to look lean and "cut" (with well-defined
muscles). This behavior led to fasts that lasted days at a time and,
ultimately, an inability to keep food down. Three years ago, when the
5-foot-10 young man weighed 93 pounds, he decided to seek treatment. He
chose an eating-disorder center in Southern California that accepts males
but treats mostly females.
At times, he was the only male in a therapy group. Often, he says, he had
trouble relating to how the women felt fat. He wasn't focused on his weight
as much as on controlling his body. And he was troubled by what he calls the
"feminist slant" of the therapists, blaming men and media images for
pressuring women. "They said that society teaches women to be thin, to be
ashamed of their bodies," says Mr. Grennell, 24 years old. "That really made
me uncomfortable because that's not my experience."
Such issues are often cited by experts who say single-sex group therapy
is preferable. At Remuda Ranch in Wickenburg , Ariz. , which treats only
women, David Wall, director of psychological services, says that women, for
instance, often find it difficult to talk about issues such as sexual abuse
and body image in front of male patients.
Indeed, some experts say that single-sex groups can be powerful tools to
healing for men. "They provide a safe place, a way for men to come in and
talk about issues relevant to men," says Brad Kennington, a therapist in
Austin , Texas , who formed a therapy group for men with eating disorders
last year that met for several months.
"Women will talk about how they are no longer ovulating, which is not a
symptom in men," says Mr. Kennington. "Men will talk about the role of men
in a relationship and how that role gets questioned when they have an eating
disorder."
Although men are often reluctant to seek treatment, some eating-disorder
centers are seeing an increase in male patients. At Rogers Memorial Hospital
, in Oconomowoc , Wis. -- which has one of the best-known all-male
eating-disorder programs -- the number of male eating-disorder patients has
grown 50% in the past three years; males now represent 25% of the 200 or so
eating-disorder patients a year in the residential program.
Rogers , which is where Mr. Huffaker sought help, treats about seven
males at a time. They live separately from the female patients. Ted Weltzin,
a psychiatrist and director of the eating-disorder programs, says males have
different body-image issues than females, need more help overcoming their
compulsive exercise habits and often have a harder time understanding the
emotions behind the disorder.
Male-only therapy lets them "see other males cry in group therapy and
then go to dinner and talk about sports," he says.
Only a handful of other clinics around the country have specific programs
for males. At River Oaks Hospital , in New Orleans , males have their own
group and body-image sessions. But they share other group activities with
females, including anger-management sessions and post-meal therapy. "I
believe the mix of males and females is helpful," says Susan Willard,
clinical director of the hospital's eating-disorders treatment center. "It
broadens the perspective for both populations."
The University of Iowa 's eating-disorders program, where 14% of the
patients are male, has a separate psychotherapy group and strength-training
for males, and men can have testosterone replaced if they need it. Men who
are malnourished may have low testosterone, says Dr. Andersen, which makes
it difficult to build and maintain muscle.
At the Center for Eating Disorders at Sheppard Pratt, in Baltimore ,
which has four to six male patients in residence at a time, double the
number from five years ago, doctors hold male-only group sessions when they
have enough patients. "We focus on what it's like for males to live in a
society that focuses on these disorders as women's issues," says Harry
Brandt, director of the center.
Source: WSJ
Last updated: 04/07
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