Helping Someone with an Eating Disorder
Treatment can save the life of someone with an eating disorder. Friends,
relatives, teachers, and physicians all play an important role in helping
the ill person start and stay with a treatment program.
Encouragement,
caring, and persistence, as well as
information about eating disorders and
their
dangers, may be needed to convince the ill person to get help, stick
with treatment, or try again.
Family members and friends can call local hospitals or university medical
centers to
find out about eating disorder clinics and clinicians experienced
in treating the illnesses. For college students, treatment programs may be
available in school counseling centers.
Family members and friends should read as much as possible about eating
disorders, so they can help the person with the illness understand his or
her problem. Many local mental health organizations and the self-help groups
listed at the end of this brochure provide free literature on eating
disorders. Some of these groups also provide treatment program referrals and
information on local self-help groups. Once the person gets help, he or she
will continue to need lots of understanding and encouragement to stay in
treatment.
by Lee Hoffman
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