Wednesday, December 1, 2021

Eating Disorder Treatment In The UK – How Does It Work And What Needs To Change?

What Is An Eating Disorder?

An eating disorder is a mental health condition that revolves around food, and using food to cope with uncomfortable feelings and sometimes other situations, such as trauma. This can mean eating too little or eating too much, worrying about weight or specific parts of the body and what they look like, and compensatory behaviour e.g. using laxatives to ‘get rid of’ food that has been consumed, or over-exercising.

Types Of Eating Disorder

- Anorexia Nervosa – Controlling weight by restricting food intake, over-exercising or a combination of the two.

- Bulimia Nervosa – Struggling to control the amount of food eaten and then taking unhealthy drastic action to ‘reverse’ this.

- Binge Eating Disorder – Regularly eating large amounts of food until past full, and struggling to control this behaviour.

Who Is Most Likely To Develop An Eating Disorder?

Eating disorder treatment in the UK isn’t as accessible as it should be. An eating disorder can affect anybody, but are most likely to develop in the teenage years. They can continue into adulthood if left untreated, and can put the sufferer at risk of many complications, such as diabetes, liver problems, heart problems, osteoporosis, and death. Eating disorders are often thought of as a teenage girl problem, however, many boys and men are also affected by eating disorders. Stigmatising the issue often leads boys and men to feel more shame about their behaviours and so they are less likely to seek help.

Eating Disorder Treatment In The UK

If you think you may be suffering with an eating disorder, you should visit your GP to address your concerns. Your GP should take you seriously and refer you to specialists who will be able to help with a diagnosis and treatment for your eating disorder. Eating disorder treatment in the UK varies depending on the disorder, and the severity of it. For example, someone with Bulimia Nervosa may require regular meetings with a therapist and see a lot of progress using a self-help book and eating plan which helps them repair their relationship with food and increase their self-esteem. Alongside this, blood tests should also be taken to ensure that there are no health problems as a result of the eating disorder behaviours. Somebody with a very severe case of Bulimia Nervosa may need constant supervision and therefore it would be better for them to be admitted as an in-patient so that they can be supervised through recovery.

Therapies

Therapy is a big part of eating disorder treatment in the UK, and elsewhere in the world. Depending on the eating disorder, the therapies that may be used are cognitive behavioural therapy, cognitive analytic therapy, interpersonal psychotherapy, and family interventions. Someone struggling with an eating disorder may also be referred to a self-help support group. 

Barriers To Treatment

Unfortunately, with mental health services being stretched and eating disorders being highly misunderstood by many, there can be barriers to treatment for those with eating disorders. One barrier is weight. For some eating disorders, like Anorexia Nervosa, being underweight is often a symptom. Depending on whereabouts in the United Kingdom you are, BMI may be taken into account when admitting somebody with an eating disorder. Sadly, this means a lot of people who are overweight but suffering with an eating disorder struggle to get treatment for it and aren’t taken seriously. It reinforces the idea that somebody can’t have an eating disorder unless they are underweight, which is not true at all. As well as this, sufferers may feel that they are not ‘sick enough’ to seek treatment, which may worsen disordered eating behaviours and put them at more risk.

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