Treating Eating Disorder Patients Against Their Will -- Does it Work?
(November 22, 2000) --
People with eating disorders often refuse
treatment for many reasons including fear of weight gain and the stigma of
being hospitalized. But if
eating disorders go untreated, they can have
serious medical consequences --
death being one of them.
If an adult refuses treatment for a life-threatening illness, he or she
can be legally required to enter a treatment program. But involuntary
treatment of eating disorders, including anorexia and bulimia, is
controversial, mostly because some experts suggest that it is
counterproductive if the patient isn't willing to cooperate.
Now new research suggests that such involuntary treatment may be just as
effective as voluntary treatment -- at least in the short run. The findings
appear in the November issue of the American Journal of Psychiatry.
Of nearly 400 patients admitted to an eating disorders program during a
seven-year period, the 66 patients who were involuntarily committed were
hospitalized for an average of more than two weeks longer than the voluntary
patients, mostly because they were in worse shape and weighed less. However,
both groups gained weight at the same rate on a weekly basis.
The study did not assess how patients did in the long term, but a new
study is now under way looking at how such patients fare five to 20 years
after treatment.
"The short-term response of the legally committed patients was just as
good as the response of the patients admitted for voluntary treatment,"
concludes Tureka L. Watson, MS, a psychiatry researcher the University of
Iowa in Iowa City, and colleagues. "Further, the majority of those
involuntarily treated later affirmed the necessity of their treatment and
showed goodwill toward the treatment process."
Craig Johnson, PhD, says that he has no difficulty admitting
adolescents, or
even adults, involuntarily if they have had previous
intensive treatment. "If their anorexia is severe ... their ability to think
clearly is compromised, and they don't have the skills to make good
judgments." Johnson is the director of the eating disorder program at the
Laureate Clinic and Hospital in Tulsa, Okla.
In these cases, one should intervene as aggressively as possible, he
says. "The courts, of course, view this differently ... they are far less
prepared to commit people over not eating," he adds.
"There is tremendous resistance even in people who are ... eager to get
better," says Abigail H. Natenshon, an eating disorder psychotherapist in
private practice in Highland Park, Ill., and founder and director of Eating
Disorder Specialists of Illinois.
"In a sense, the eating disorder makes them feel better than being healed
because the eating disorder gives them a sense of control and power over
their lives," says Natensohn, author of
When Your Child Has an Eating
Disorder: A Step-by-Step Workbook for Parents and Other Caregivers.
Even a patient who voluntarily gets treatment is afraid to give up this
disease, she says. Some may be afraid that they will lose control over all
of their life if they gain weight and/or get better.
But the first step in any eating disorder recovery is to get the
patient's weight back into the healthy range, she says "Even medications
will not have an effect on a person who is malnourished because their brain
is malnourished and their perceptions are distorted," she says.
A hospital will force feed if it has to, Natenshon says. "Once
hospitalized, a patient has no choice but to restore enough body weight so
they are no longer in danger of dying." She explains that because patients
are being fed, they eventually become more accepting of treatment willing
patients.
About 10 million adolescent females and
one million males struggle with
eating disorders and conditions that border on eating disorders, according
to Eating Disorders Awareness and Prevention Inc. of Seattle.
By Denise Mann
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