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According to the Sunday Mirror,v ...

Posted May 27 2009 11:34pm 2 Comments

According to the  Sunday Mirror, via ProQuest Information and PsychPort.com, SOARING numbers of young girls in Great Britain are being treated in hospital for eating disorders.

The report claims that cases of bulimia and anorexia among girls under 18 have leaped by 47 percent in the U.K. from 562 in 2004 to 825 last year.

Especially alarming is the data that shows there has also been a 25 per cent rise in girls UNDER AGE NINE being treated for eating disorders.

The new figures also show the number of women needing hospital treatment in the U.K. has risen by 25 per cent to 1,740 compared with 1,398 in 2004. The number of men being treated for eating disorders has also gone up, rising to 226 last year from 183 in 2004.

According to the article, U.K. health experts blame the increasing pressure on young people to stay thin for the rising number of anorexia and bulimia cases. In a recent poll of 3,000 teenagers 75 per cent said they felt they needed to lose weight after looking at pictures of skinny stars.

Susan Ringwood, chief executive of eating disorder charity Beat, said: "We are very concerned by these figures. We have heard of cases of people being told by doctors 'wait and see and come back later'. And these people get very, very ill before they get any help.

"Eating disorders are a serious psychiatric condition. It's worrying that young people who are suffering are not getting the appropriate treatment until they are dangerously ill."


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Comments (2)
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I started binge eating at either 10 or 11 years old.  Before that I was unheathily preoccupied with being fat -- like in the first grade.  My parents saw the signs and red flags but didn't know what to do about it.  It turned into bulimia when I went off to college and I've been struggling uphill on a mountain it seems, ever sense.  Now that I accept that it's a serious mental illness with serious medical complications, it worries me too that young girls and boys, men and women aren't being treated appropriately.  Especially here in the US where the healthcare industry has nothing to do with providing excellent healthcare.  I was lucky enough to have good insurance, but two months in residential isn't enough combat over a decade of disordered eating.  We need people to change their views on mental illness, especially eating disorders and depression, so that the quality of everyone's life can be improved.  I didn't have to end up this way if we lived in a society that actually took precautions to prevent this sort of thing from happening to young women.  I guess I should also say that I didn't have to end up this way if I lived in a home that taught me self acceptance, self care, and self love.  It begins at home but it's not something a family should have to struggle with on their own.

Hi Erin,

Thank you SO much for sharing that! I can certainly understand your passion for the issue, especially given your experience. You are so right, prevention efforts are so very important. And the issue of health care access is one that many people continue to fight for. We need your efforts and your voice! Thank you so much for helping to make changes and improve understanding of eating disorders!

Let me know how I can help! ;-)

Best wishes,

Dr. Sari Shepphird

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