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Guidelines for Significant Others

Family and Friends are Victims of Eating Disorders Too

HealthyPlace.com Video

watch this video on eating disorders The Causes and Effects of Eating Disorders

Today's mainstream culture projects a narrow view of beauty for women. Attempting to attain this level of "perfection" can have unhealthy consequences. Joyce A. Adams, M.D. and Trish Stanley, PsyD, MFT discuss the cause, effect and treatment of eating disorders in adolescent women.

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Friends and family members are often the forgotten victims of eating disorders. If someone you care about has an eating disorder, it is difficult to know what to do for the person or for yourself. No matter what effort might be taken, such as helping find a therapist, sitting up all night talking, taking away laxatives, and so on, ultimately you have no power over another person's behavior.

You do have power over what you choose to do about the situation, and the more knowledgeable and prepared you are, the better chance you have for success. Even when you don't know how your friend or loved one will react to your concern, it is important that you express it and offer to help. Even if your concern or help is received poorly, don't give up. It is difficult but important that friends and family members keep trying to reach out to a suffering loved one in order to facilitate the person getting help and to support her during her struggle. Your efforts, love, and encouragement may be crucial to your loved one's recovery. People who have recovered from eating disorders often cite being loved, believed in, and not given up on as crucial factors in their getting help and getting well.

If you have observed behaviors in friends or loved ones and are concerned that they have a problem with food or weight, that is enough reason to say something to them. You do not need to wait until you have signs or proof of a full-blown eating disorder. The sooner you discuss things the better, for your sake and for theirs.

HOW TO APPROACH AND TALK TO SOMEONE YOU SUSPECT HAS A PROBLEM

PICK A TIME AND PLACE WHERE THERE WILL BE NO INTERRUPTIONS AND NO NEED TO HURRY

You must allow for privacy and plenty of time for both you and your friend or loved one to say everything that needs to be said.

BE EMPATHIC AND UNDERSTANDING
HealthyPlace.com Audio

listen to this audio on eating disordersAdolescent Eating Disorders

What are eating disorders and how do they develop in teenagers?

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The first step, and most important thing to remember throughout your experience with a loved one who suffers from an eating disorder, is to have empathy. The best way to describe empathy is that it is like standing in someone else's shoes. Empathy is an effort to understand someone's experience as she experiences it and to convey that understanding. The only way to do this is to not be invested in changing the person or in getting her to change her perspective; that can come later. Before a loved one is going to be able to see another perspective, she will need to know that someone recognizes the legitimacy and importance of her own.

Don't worry that empathizing is not enough and that you need to do something or get your loved one to take action. It is true that if you stop at empathy you can "love and understand someone with an eating disorder to death," but empathy is a necessary first step and must be continually maintained. Once a person knows you understand and are not going to try and take over or take the eating disorder away, then you can begin helping in other ways, such as getting information, finding specialists, making appointments, reassuring, and even confronting. Just remember that all of this needs to take place after a person first feels understood and accepted.

Asking for help is usually one of the hardest things for those suffering from eating disorders to do. They need to learn that asking for and receiving help is not a weakness and they do not need to handle everything alone. Ultimately this helps them to learn that they can reach out to people instead of their eating disorder behaviors to escape from their pain. Even if there are limits to what you can do, they need to know you can help.

EXPRESS YOUR CONCERN ABOUT WHAT YOU HAVE OBSERVED AND SPEAK FROM YOUR OWN EXPERIENCE

It is important to stay calm and keep to specific personal examples. It is best to use "I" statements rather than "You" statements. Using "I" statements means that it is only in your opinion or from your own perspective that you are speaking. Using "You" statements sounds judgmental and is apt to create a defensive reaction.

Instead of saying:

You're too thin, say, I look at you and see you wasting away and I'm scared.

You have to stop throwing up, say, I heard you throwing up and I'm worried about your health.

You are ruining our relationship, say, I'm concerned for you and felt like I had to say something or we would both run the risk of being dishonest with each other.

You must get help, say, I'd like to help you to find help.

Be careful not to use "You" statements that are disguised as "I" statements (e.g., "I think you are just trying to get attention"). Don't focus all of your discussion on food, weight, exercise, or other be-haviors. It is easy to get caught up and stuck in discussing your loved one's behaviors, such as eating too little, not weighing enough, bingeing too much, purging, and so on. These are valid concerns and important to comment on, but focusing on behaviors alone can be counterproductive.

For example, a person with anorexia nervosa will be pleased rather than alarmed to hear that she is painfully thin. Remember, the underlying issues, not just the behaviors, are important. Loved ones may be less defensive when approached with the idea that they seem sad, not "themselves," or unhappy. They are likely to be less threatened about discussing these problems.

PROVIDE INFORMATION ABOUT RESOURCES FOR TREATMENT

It is wise to be prepared with helpful information and suggestions in case your friend or loved one is ready and willing to receive them. Try to have the name of a doctor and/or therapist, the fees they charge, and how to make an appointment. If a treatment program is needed, have that information as well. Ask your loved one to consider going to at least one appointment and offer to go together. Of course, if you are a parent of a minor you will have to go to the first appointment and you should be included on some level. It is important that your loved one feel safe and confident that his therapist is there for him.

DO NOT ARGUE OR GET INTO A POWER STRUGGLE

Expect to be rejected in the beginning and don't give up. It is very likely that the person you are concerned about will deny the problem, become angry, or refuse to get help. It does no good to argue. Stick to your feelings, how you experience the situation, and your hope that the person will get help. Parents may eventually have to use their authority over a child and force them to go to treatment. In this situation let the therapist help negotiate power struggles.

ACCEPT YOUR LIMITATIONS

There is a limit to what you can do for another person. It is easy to fall into the trap of believing that if you said or did the right thing, then your friend or loved one would be helped and you would not feel powerless. There is a lot you can do, but ultimately you alone cannot change the problem or make it go away. You must learn to accept your own helplessness and limitations as to what you can and cannot do—but don't give up. Keep in mind that people often need to hear something several times before they act on it.

It is important to remember that your friend or loved one has a right to refuse treatment. Even minors forced to go can sit silently refusing to get help. If you believe that her life is in danger, you must get immediate help from a professional. Go to the appointment yourself even if your loved one refuses. A professional can help you deal with a person who is in denial or resisting treatment. It is possible that an intervention (discussed next) can be set up that may facilitate your loved one agreeing to get help.

INTERVENTIONS—GETTING HELP FOR A PERSON WHO IS IN DENIAL OR REFUSES IT

If you are concerned that someone you care about has an eating disorder that is severe or life threatening, and you have tried to talk to her about entering into treatment without success, you could try an intervention. Interventions are well known in the field of drug and alcohol abuse, but not for eating disorders. An intervention is a carefully orchestrated event planned in secret by significant others with the help of a professional for the purpose of confronting a loved one in order to discuss concerns and compel the person to get help for her problem.

Interventions should be carefully planned, or they may do more harm than good. The professional involved should have experience in eating disorders and in interventions. The timing, the people involved, the structuring of what is said, getting the person there, and the treatment plan options are all critical for a successful intervention.

If you want to do an intervention for a loved one, you need to enlist the help of a professional and a few people (try for six or so) who are significant in your loved one's life, such as relatives, friends, coaches, coworkers, teachers, and so on. These people will all need to meet together and carefully plan the intervention. A summary of an intervention follows.

On the day of the intervention a plan will be carried out regarding how to get the person to the intervention or to bring the intervention to her. Presenting a united front, the participants will tell the loved one in a caring, compassionate, and straightforward way what they have personally observed and what their concerns are. The examples should include health and functioning, not just weight or eating behaviors.

Each person should give specific examples and express the desire that the loved one be healthy and happy. How the eating disorder has affected the person physically, emotionally, psychologically, and in relationships should be discussed. Although the intervention is planned in advance, it is important to be natural and informal enough to help the loved one be as comfortable as possible.

Expect that the person with the eating disorder will feel set up and become angry. Try to understand the anger and reassure the individual that you are not trying to control her but that you could not go on without doing something about the situation. Encourage your loved one to express whatever feelings she has and listen in a nonjudgmental manner. Do not argue about whether there is a problem. Validate anything the person says and then reiterate your worries and what you have observed.

HealthyPlace.com Articles/Conference Transcripts

How To Recover From Bulimia and Other Eating Disorders

 

Provide information regarding the plan or options for treatment. Explain that arrangements have been made and are ready to be carried out, and execute the plan if the person agrees. If your loved one persists in denying the problem and refusing to get treatment, you will have to accept it. Remind yourself that the eating disorder is serving a purpose in her life and you cannot force her to let it go. Don't give up; the issue may have to be addressed repeatedly before a person agrees to get help.

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Every individual involved in the intervention will then have to decide what the next step is and what course the relationship with the loved one will take. For example, husbands have actually threatened to divorce their wives unless they get help. This may sound extreme and unfair but, when there are children involved who suffer from the caretaking of an anorexic mother, this drastic measure is easier to understand and can turn out to be the motivation that initiates treatment and even recovery. Please remember that this is only for extreme cases. Interventions should be used only as a last resort, after other attempts to get the person help have been exhausted.

continues page 2

By Carolyn Costin, MA, M.Ed., MFCC - Medical Reference from "The Eating Disorders Sourcebook"

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