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Showing posts from July, 2014

Meet and March

F.E.A.S.T. Coffee Break at the M.O.M March in D.C. Are you planning for the March on Washington in September?  If you are: Hurry and register.....September is fast approaching! Travelling may be a challenge for many reasons-  however, for those of you attending (or considering) a F.E.A.S.T. Coffee Break is planned for Tuesday before the start of the day's events. When :  10:00 am Tuesday, September 30, 2014 Where :  Starbucks, Lobby of Marriot Hotel, 1331 Pennsylvania Ave NW Washington, D.C. Registration information:   http://www.marchagainsted.com/2.html For those of you on the fence or just beginning to contemplate coming.....please do.  Putting real faces (and families) to the statistics goes a long way in helping dispel the myths around this illness.

Victim, Villain, Hero

I am in a trial. No worries- am not on  trial. Along with feeding and watching  (the ED version of 'Eat, Pray, Love') I also do some law.  This has been a crazy summer of trials and they tend to suck everything into them like a black hole.  So, have had little time to sit and get a blog post out (extra energy is directed to above noted feeding and watching) but litigation has me thinking about conflict and stories and eating disorders (like, I said....everything gets sucked into the black hole...even eating disorders). There is a classic conflict story with 3 characters: 1. The Victim 2. The Villain 3. The Hero Actually, you could argue that these 3 characters are in every classic story full stop.  The conflict triad is the basis for a primal narrative script that all (not just conflict) stories use (think of your favourite fairy tale or any soap opera or every Hollywood blockbuster you have seen):    Victim (damsel in distress/underdog/orphan who lives under the stairs

Information, Support and HOPE

Project Hope Exchange This is a really neat project:  A data base of easily accessible messages of hope. Please consider taking just few minutes of time and leaving a 30 second message on Project Hope Exchange .  It is simple, really.  You can do over the phone or online. 30 seconds. Information, support and hope got many of us through the worse of it.  Pass some of that on for another family.  The video below gives direction and a template.  Think back to the early days and what gave you hope.....and then tell a stranger-friend on the phone. Let's make sure families caring for children diagnosed with eating disorders hear that they are not alone and that there is reason to hope.

Friday Round Up and a Birthday Celebration

A few interesting recently published studies: 1.  Assessing eating disorder symptoms in adolescence: Is there a role for multiple informants? Findings:  Epidemiologic eating disorder studies should consider the potential value added from incorporating parental reports, particularly in studies of males.   Interesting....Yes!  Ask Parents what they see.  Wouldn't you think?! (especially with an illness where patient may be anosognosic). 2.  Mandating weekly weight gain in a day treatment program for eating disorders. Findings: Post-treatment weight was significantly higher in patients treated in the required weight gain protocol compared to those treated in the recommended weight gain protocol. All patients, regardless of which program they completed, showed improvements in the measures of eating-disorder and comorbid-psychiatric symptoms. Interesting.....'required' weight gain protocol yielded significant higher results than 'recommended' weight gain protoc

Barriers to Treatment: Anosognosia

I still mispronunciation this one every so often.  For some reason I always want to put the 'g' at the beginning.  Given the amount of times I have said this term over the past 3 years I really have no excuse for still messing it up.  It is etched in my brain and should just roll off my tongue:  Anosognosia. Anosognosia. Anosognosia.   What is it?   It is: - the medical term for when individuals are unable to understand that they are sick. - often a symptom of eating disorders - related to changes in the anatomical structure of the brain   It is NOT: -'denial' or a matter of being 'unwilling' to accept the illness. It can also be one of the most confounding barriers to treatment: It  can render our kids unable to acknowledge that the behaviour they are engaged in or the thoughts they experience are anything other than ordinary; it can make for active resistance and non-compliance; and, it can be a mountain we have to scale with those who talk to us