“Anorexia no longer just a teen disease” - Uh, duh.
OK, so I haven’t even left the state yet and I’m already posting another story despite my promised absence. But, I couldn’t let this one go unposted, as I am one who experienced an adult-onset eating disorder.
The Associated Press reports today on “More Women Over 20 Battling Eating Disorders.”
More adult women than ever are seeking help for an eating disorder, reports the article. The Eating Disorders Institute is building a new facility, set to open in 2009, that will offer a treatment track for mature patients.
In the Minneapolis suburb of St. Louis Park, Park Nicollet Health Services’ Eating Disorders Institute saw 43 patients age 38 in 2003 — about 9 percent of its total patients. For the first six months of this year, the institute has treated nearly 500 patients over 38, about 35 percent of its total.
The Renfrew Center, a network of treatment centers in the eastern U.S., said about 20 percent of the 522 patients treated at its Philadelphia center in 2005 were 30 or older. In 2006, about 13 percent of the 600 patients were in that age group.
Most disorders often peak in a woman’s teens and early 20s, says Dr. Donald McAlpine, director of an eating disorders clinic at Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minn. And as author Trisha Gura discovered, they don’t just disappear with the right to vote. Gura’s book, Lying in Weight: The Hidden Epidemic of Eating Disorders in Adult Women, was just released earlier this year.
Read The-F-Word’s interview with Gura here. Or, another book to check out is Aimee Liu’s latest, Gaining: The Truth About Life After Eating Disorders.
Okay, on to vacation. I swear.
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