This document discusses the advantages of referring to eating disorders as brain disorders from the perspective of patients and caregivers. It notes that this language implies urgency, acknowledges the challenge for patients, aligns with other mental health fields, and focuses parents on what they can do to help rather than feel guilt. Some quotes from patients and parents indicate that this perspective helped reduce shame, guilt, and blame while providing clarity and empowering recovery efforts. The presenter, Laura Collins Lyster-Mensh, has no commercial relationships to disclose.
Anorexia nervosa remains an enigma and its clinical challenge is intimidating. But the potential for new insights has been advancing, largely as a result of elegant research in the neurosciences that has modeled behavioral processes resembling key features of the illness.
Many people experience increased feelings of depression, conflict, family tension, and anxiety during infertility. An experienced and supportive infertility counselor can help individuals and couples understand and cope with the stress and confusion of infertility. This counselor might be a licensed psychiatrist, psychologist, or social worker. The academic degree itself is not important in most cases; what is important is the counselor’s understanding of and approach to infertility issues and treatments. Some clients prefer a counselor who has personally experienced infertility, but a good counselor will be able to help a client regardless of his or her background.Compared with support groups, infertility counseling has many advantages. Some people enjoy the energy of group sessions, but others feel that group sessions are too dramatic, do not like the personalities of some members, or do not feel comfortable speaking candidly to a group. Inevitably, there will be pregnancy announcements, which can seem like “graduations” to those who are still trying to conceive. Also, some issues are too serious and pressing to be adequately addressed in a group setting, such as persistent depression, marriage problems, and conflict over the next step in treatment or ending treatment.
Anorexia nervosa remains an enigma and its clinical challenge is intimidating. But the potential for new insights has been advancing, largely as a result of elegant research in the neurosciences that has modeled behavioral processes resembling key features of the illness.
Many people experience increased feelings of depression, conflict, family tension, and anxiety during infertility. An experienced and supportive infertility counselor can help individuals and couples understand and cope with the stress and confusion of infertility. This counselor might be a licensed psychiatrist, psychologist, or social worker. The academic degree itself is not important in most cases; what is important is the counselor’s understanding of and approach to infertility issues and treatments. Some clients prefer a counselor who has personally experienced infertility, but a good counselor will be able to help a client regardless of his or her background.Compared with support groups, infertility counseling has many advantages. Some people enjoy the energy of group sessions, but others feel that group sessions are too dramatic, do not like the personalities of some members, or do not feel comfortable speaking candidly to a group. Inevitably, there will be pregnancy announcements, which can seem like “graduations” to those who are still trying to conceive. Also, some issues are too serious and pressing to be adequately addressed in a group setting, such as persistent depression, marriage problems, and conflict over the next step in treatment or ending treatment.
Grief in the NICU: Identifying, Understanding and Helping Grieving ParentsKirsti Dyer MD, MS
PowerPoint slides presented March 31, 2009 as a Teleconference for "Managing the Spectrum of Maternal Mental Health Issues from Conception through the Neonatal Experience" at the HHC Perinatal Conference held at Jacobi Medical Center.
Contact me if you are interested in using this lecture.
Meet Braeden Rogers and his beloved German shepherd, Jill, a dynamic duo battling diabetes
Read our annual report to learn how we're making a difference in thousands of young lives.
See how generous donors like you are giving brighter futures to patients at Children's Hospital.
Anorexics process self identity differently than others, ut southwestern stud...fightagainstanorexia
Anorexics process self identity differently than others, ut southwestern study shows | dallas-fort worth communities - news for dallas, texas - the dallas morning news
Teaching our children to be spiritual beings is a great way to develop a deeper connection with them. Children want to know who they are and that they have a connection to something greater than themselves, whether that be God, the universe, nature, the force or whatever you want to call it. When I talk about spirituality, I am referring to the real essence of who we are. Developing spirituality is a lifetime journey of self-discovery. It is about opening our hearts and finding our true purpose in life. Spirituality is about our attitudes, values and our practices; about the things that motivate us at the very deepest levels of our being.
IDS 250-01 Liberal Arts Capstone-- Fall 2014
CRN 3324 Wednesdays 1:15-3:57 in Room 1120
Narrating the Body/Reshaping the Discourse
Instructor: Dr. Daniela Ragusa (dragusa@ccc.commnet.edu 860-906-5202) Humanities Department
Office Hours: Monday & Tuesday and by appointment (office: room 1114)
Catalog Description: IDS 250 Liberal Arts Capstone is an interdisciplinary course focusing on a theme affecting cross sections of humanity. It is designed to broaden students’ perspectives beyond their own culture or discipline and to provide an opportunity for the integration of knowledge gained in General Education courses taken previously. The course will have a rigorous writing component and is required for all students graduating from the Liberal Arts Program (this requirement applies to students who enroll in the Fall of 2007 or later).
Prerequisites: ENG 101, ENG 102. Students must be in their second year (i.e. 30+ credits) of the Liberal Arts and Sciences degree program to take this course. If you do not meet these requirements but have registered anyway, you may still not be eligible to get credit for this course. Please see me in the first week of the semester if you do not meet the prerequisite requirements.
Goals & Objectives: This course will challenge you to grow in all six learning goals of the Liberal Arts and Sciences Degree Program: (1) effective communication, (2) use of information technology, (3) scientific reasoning, (4) critical thinking, (5) research and documentation skills, and (6) global awareness.
Course Description: Our topic for this semester is how body narratives (the personal stories people tell about their bodies) fit into body discourses (larger conversations about the human body existing in the public realm.) In this course, students will inquire into the political import of these narratives to discuss how privilege and oppression become embodied in the ways we view our very selves and in the ways we view others. Furthermore, students will consider how historical, medical, societal, cultural, aesthetic, and other contexts form competing versions of mainstream and alternative discourses, which in turn help create our understanding of: what bodies are for, what they can (and can't) do, to whom they belong, where they are allowed to exist, when they are permitted to be seen, how they are used, and why they are valued, or not.
With the help of guest speakers (professors who are experts in their fields, as well as student-leaders and community members with personal expertise on various topics), students will learn how people narrate the stories of their own bodies according to and/or contrary to public discourses existing outside of themselves. For example: people tell stories of weight loss or weight gain within the paradigm of the weight loss industry as it is mediated by advertising and/or medical rhetoric. Another example: people tell stories of their struggle with alcoholism, drug abuse, and sobrie
Disability, Hysteria, and Environmental IllnessMy rank as a .docxsalmonpybus
"Disability, Hysteria, and Environmental Illness"
My rank as a Disability Target is a new concept to me. Prior to March of 2018 I was considered perfectly healthy with no disabilities. From November 2017 through February of 2018, I had a cold that persisted for months. I was congested, coughing all the time and having issues falling asleep because I couldn’t breathe while laying down. At first the doctors gave me cold remedies and antibiotics, treating the condition as a severe cold. After a few months, I was sent to an allergist and I was told I have asthma and am allergic to most of the trees in Washington. My skin even reacted to the saline they used as the control for the test. They then had to perform a different, very painful test to be sure the first diagnosis was accurate because I reacted to saline control. In lieu of my recent transition into being a Disability Target, I decided that “Disability, Hysteria, and Environmental Illness”, was the perfect topic to discuss.
I had a hard time accepting this news. I am an athlete, I play the trombone, and I love climbing trees. How is this possible? I’ve never had problems with my lungs or issues around trees. My entire life up until that diagnosis, I had held Agent Rank in the category Disability. I always thought that asthma was a thing people got if they didn’t go outside or get enough exercise. I believed that if they exerted themselves more, then their lungs would get stronger. When we were kids, my friends and I wouldn’t pick the kid in the neighborhood with the inhaler to be on our team because we wanted to win. I can’t even remember his name. In fact, my first thought when the doctor told me I had asthma was, ‘What? I am not nerdy like… whatever his name!’. I even argued with her about my allergy to the trees in Washington because I had spent the last ten years in Alaska around the same tress and never had a problem. Before being diagnosed, while still a Disability Agent, I was an antagonist. My contribution to oppression was Ableism, using the Agent skills of indifference and distancing to ignore and separate myself from people I didn’t view as equal to me. After being diagnosed, I used the Target skills of Survival and Confusion when questioning medical tests that clearly indicated that I have a disability. As Nieto states, “Confusion skills are a response to the stress caused by oppression and the simultaneous denial that exists.” (p. 155) It became clear to me that I was in denial as an Agent and may still be in denial as a Target.
In an unintentional position of power and control, I used minimizing, denying and blaming to oppress that kid in the neighborhood with asthma. I have always thought of myself as a good person, yet how could I think that way without thinking about the impact my actions had on that kid. Now that I am on the other side, I understand it more. It’s hard to describe what it feels like to try to take a breath but not be able to. Your chest even moves up an.
The Shared World of Religion, Meditation, Alcohol, Drugs and Sex
A paper to be presented at the Annual Conference for Association of Transpersonal Psychology at Atherton on Feb 14th.
Spirituality in Action : Bringing Transpersonal Psychology to a World in Crisis
The Shared World of Religion, Meditation, Alcohol, Drugs and Sex
A paper to be presented at the Annual Conference for Association of Transpersonal Psychology, Atherton, on Feb 14.
Spirituality in Action: Bringing Transpersonal Psychology to the World in Crisis
XXXIVth International Congress on Law and Mental Health. Vienna, 2015.
Perseveration – The Lens by Which Those Afflicted with FASD Interpret their Relationship and Environment
A 2015 presentation by Victoria Costello, science journalist, author and mental health advocate, demonstrating how lay advocates can access and incorporate scientific evidence into their family and community advocacy for mental health for all. References Victoria Costello's memoir, A Lethal Inheritance, A Mother Uncovers the Science Behind Three Generations of Mental Illness, published by Prometheus in 2012. Presented on May 29, 2015 at the annual meeting of Parent Professional Advocacy League in MA. Website: http://www.mentalhealthmomblog.com
Grief in the NICU: Identifying, Understanding and Helping Grieving ParentsKirsti Dyer MD, MS
PowerPoint slides presented March 31, 2009 as a Teleconference for "Managing the Spectrum of Maternal Mental Health Issues from Conception through the Neonatal Experience" at the HHC Perinatal Conference held at Jacobi Medical Center.
Contact me if you are interested in using this lecture.
Meet Braeden Rogers and his beloved German shepherd, Jill, a dynamic duo battling diabetes
Read our annual report to learn how we're making a difference in thousands of young lives.
See how generous donors like you are giving brighter futures to patients at Children's Hospital.
Anorexics process self identity differently than others, ut southwestern stud...fightagainstanorexia
Anorexics process self identity differently than others, ut southwestern study shows | dallas-fort worth communities - news for dallas, texas - the dallas morning news
Teaching our children to be spiritual beings is a great way to develop a deeper connection with them. Children want to know who they are and that they have a connection to something greater than themselves, whether that be God, the universe, nature, the force or whatever you want to call it. When I talk about spirituality, I am referring to the real essence of who we are. Developing spirituality is a lifetime journey of self-discovery. It is about opening our hearts and finding our true purpose in life. Spirituality is about our attitudes, values and our practices; about the things that motivate us at the very deepest levels of our being.
IDS 250-01 Liberal Arts Capstone-- Fall 2014
CRN 3324 Wednesdays 1:15-3:57 in Room 1120
Narrating the Body/Reshaping the Discourse
Instructor: Dr. Daniela Ragusa (dragusa@ccc.commnet.edu 860-906-5202) Humanities Department
Office Hours: Monday & Tuesday and by appointment (office: room 1114)
Catalog Description: IDS 250 Liberal Arts Capstone is an interdisciplinary course focusing on a theme affecting cross sections of humanity. It is designed to broaden students’ perspectives beyond their own culture or discipline and to provide an opportunity for the integration of knowledge gained in General Education courses taken previously. The course will have a rigorous writing component and is required for all students graduating from the Liberal Arts Program (this requirement applies to students who enroll in the Fall of 2007 or later).
Prerequisites: ENG 101, ENG 102. Students must be in their second year (i.e. 30+ credits) of the Liberal Arts and Sciences degree program to take this course. If you do not meet these requirements but have registered anyway, you may still not be eligible to get credit for this course. Please see me in the first week of the semester if you do not meet the prerequisite requirements.
Goals & Objectives: This course will challenge you to grow in all six learning goals of the Liberal Arts and Sciences Degree Program: (1) effective communication, (2) use of information technology, (3) scientific reasoning, (4) critical thinking, (5) research and documentation skills, and (6) global awareness.
Course Description: Our topic for this semester is how body narratives (the personal stories people tell about their bodies) fit into body discourses (larger conversations about the human body existing in the public realm.) In this course, students will inquire into the political import of these narratives to discuss how privilege and oppression become embodied in the ways we view our very selves and in the ways we view others. Furthermore, students will consider how historical, medical, societal, cultural, aesthetic, and other contexts form competing versions of mainstream and alternative discourses, which in turn help create our understanding of: what bodies are for, what they can (and can't) do, to whom they belong, where they are allowed to exist, when they are permitted to be seen, how they are used, and why they are valued, or not.
With the help of guest speakers (professors who are experts in their fields, as well as student-leaders and community members with personal expertise on various topics), students will learn how people narrate the stories of their own bodies according to and/or contrary to public discourses existing outside of themselves. For example: people tell stories of weight loss or weight gain within the paradigm of the weight loss industry as it is mediated by advertising and/or medical rhetoric. Another example: people tell stories of their struggle with alcoholism, drug abuse, and sobrie
Disability, Hysteria, and Environmental IllnessMy rank as a .docxsalmonpybus
"Disability, Hysteria, and Environmental Illness"
My rank as a Disability Target is a new concept to me. Prior to March of 2018 I was considered perfectly healthy with no disabilities. From November 2017 through February of 2018, I had a cold that persisted for months. I was congested, coughing all the time and having issues falling asleep because I couldn’t breathe while laying down. At first the doctors gave me cold remedies and antibiotics, treating the condition as a severe cold. After a few months, I was sent to an allergist and I was told I have asthma and am allergic to most of the trees in Washington. My skin even reacted to the saline they used as the control for the test. They then had to perform a different, very painful test to be sure the first diagnosis was accurate because I reacted to saline control. In lieu of my recent transition into being a Disability Target, I decided that “Disability, Hysteria, and Environmental Illness”, was the perfect topic to discuss.
I had a hard time accepting this news. I am an athlete, I play the trombone, and I love climbing trees. How is this possible? I’ve never had problems with my lungs or issues around trees. My entire life up until that diagnosis, I had held Agent Rank in the category Disability. I always thought that asthma was a thing people got if they didn’t go outside or get enough exercise. I believed that if they exerted themselves more, then their lungs would get stronger. When we were kids, my friends and I wouldn’t pick the kid in the neighborhood with the inhaler to be on our team because we wanted to win. I can’t even remember his name. In fact, my first thought when the doctor told me I had asthma was, ‘What? I am not nerdy like… whatever his name!’. I even argued with her about my allergy to the trees in Washington because I had spent the last ten years in Alaska around the same tress and never had a problem. Before being diagnosed, while still a Disability Agent, I was an antagonist. My contribution to oppression was Ableism, using the Agent skills of indifference and distancing to ignore and separate myself from people I didn’t view as equal to me. After being diagnosed, I used the Target skills of Survival and Confusion when questioning medical tests that clearly indicated that I have a disability. As Nieto states, “Confusion skills are a response to the stress caused by oppression and the simultaneous denial that exists.” (p. 155) It became clear to me that I was in denial as an Agent and may still be in denial as a Target.
In an unintentional position of power and control, I used minimizing, denying and blaming to oppress that kid in the neighborhood with asthma. I have always thought of myself as a good person, yet how could I think that way without thinking about the impact my actions had on that kid. Now that I am on the other side, I understand it more. It’s hard to describe what it feels like to try to take a breath but not be able to. Your chest even moves up an.
The Shared World of Religion, Meditation, Alcohol, Drugs and Sex
A paper to be presented at the Annual Conference for Association of Transpersonal Psychology at Atherton on Feb 14th.
Spirituality in Action : Bringing Transpersonal Psychology to a World in Crisis
The Shared World of Religion, Meditation, Alcohol, Drugs and Sex
A paper to be presented at the Annual Conference for Association of Transpersonal Psychology, Atherton, on Feb 14.
Spirituality in Action: Bringing Transpersonal Psychology to the World in Crisis
XXXIVth International Congress on Law and Mental Health. Vienna, 2015.
Perseveration – The Lens by Which Those Afflicted with FASD Interpret their Relationship and Environment
A 2015 presentation by Victoria Costello, science journalist, author and mental health advocate, demonstrating how lay advocates can access and incorporate scientific evidence into their family and community advocacy for mental health for all. References Victoria Costello's memoir, A Lethal Inheritance, A Mother Uncovers the Science Behind Three Generations of Mental Illness, published by Prometheus in 2012. Presented on May 29, 2015 at the annual meeting of Parent Professional Advocacy League in MA. Website: http://www.mentalhealthmomblog.com
Christian mental illness and stigma - Mental Health Grace Alliance is a faith-based, non-profit organization created to promote understanding in the church and provide assistance and support to individuals living with mental illness and their families.
Sources used by the Creation Health program. The quotations and statements are not those quoted in the Creation Health material, but this shows the kind of sources Creation Health draws from.
These simplified slides by Dr. Sidra Arshad present an overview of the non-respiratory functions of the respiratory tract.
Learning objectives:
1. Enlist the non-respiratory functions of the respiratory tract
2. Briefly explain how these functions are carried out
3. Discuss the significance of dead space
4. Differentiate between minute ventilation and alveolar ventilation
5. Describe the cough and sneeze reflexes
Study Resources:
1. Chapter 39, Guyton and Hall Textbook of Medical Physiology, 14th edition
2. Chapter 34, Ganong’s Review of Medical Physiology, 26th edition
3. Chapter 17, Human Physiology by Lauralee Sherwood, 9th edition
4. Non-respiratory functions of the lungs https://academic.oup.com/bjaed/article/13/3/98/278874
Muktapishti is a traditional Ayurvedic preparation made from Shoditha Mukta (Purified Pearl), is believed to help regulate thyroid function and reduce symptoms of hyperthyroidism due to its cooling and balancing properties. Clinical evidence on its efficacy remains limited, necessitating further research to validate its therapeutic benefits.
Basavarajeeyam is an important text for ayurvedic physician belonging to andhra pradehs. It is a popular compendium in various parts of our country as well as in andhra pradesh. The content of the text was presented in sanskrit and telugu language (Bilingual). One of the most famous book in ayurvedic pharmaceutics and therapeutics. This book contains 25 chapters called as prakaranas. Many rasaoushadis were explained, pioneer of dhatu druti, nadi pareeksha, mutra pareeksha etc. Belongs to the period of 15-16 century. New diseases like upadamsha, phiranga rogas are explained.
Recomendações da OMS sobre cuidados maternos e neonatais para uma experiência pós-natal positiva.
Em consonância com os ODS – Objetivos do Desenvolvimento Sustentável e a Estratégia Global para a Saúde das Mulheres, Crianças e Adolescentes, e aplicando uma abordagem baseada nos direitos humanos, os esforços de cuidados pós-natais devem expandir-se para além da cobertura e da simples sobrevivência, de modo a incluir cuidados de qualidade.
Estas diretrizes visam melhorar a qualidade dos cuidados pós-natais essenciais e de rotina prestados às mulheres e aos recém-nascidos, com o objetivo final de melhorar a saúde e o bem-estar materno e neonatal.
Uma “experiência pós-natal positiva” é um resultado importante para todas as mulheres que dão à luz e para os seus recém-nascidos, estabelecendo as bases para a melhoria da saúde e do bem-estar a curto e longo prazo. Uma experiência pós-natal positiva é definida como aquela em que as mulheres, pessoas que gestam, os recém-nascidos, os casais, os pais, os cuidadores e as famílias recebem informação consistente, garantia e apoio de profissionais de saúde motivados; e onde um sistema de saúde flexível e com recursos reconheça as necessidades das mulheres e dos bebês e respeite o seu contexto cultural.
Estas diretrizes consolidadas apresentam algumas recomendações novas e já bem fundamentadas sobre cuidados pós-natais de rotina para mulheres e neonatos que recebem cuidados no pós-parto em unidades de saúde ou na comunidade, independentemente dos recursos disponíveis.
É fornecido um conjunto abrangente de recomendações para cuidados durante o período puerperal, com ênfase nos cuidados essenciais que todas as mulheres e recém-nascidos devem receber, e com a devida atenção à qualidade dos cuidados; isto é, a entrega e a experiência do cuidado recebido. Estas diretrizes atualizam e ampliam as recomendações da OMS de 2014 sobre cuidados pós-natais da mãe e do recém-nascido e complementam as atuais diretrizes da OMS sobre a gestão de complicações pós-natais.
O estabelecimento da amamentação e o manejo das principais intercorrências é contemplada.
Recomendamos muito.
Vamos discutir essas recomendações no nosso curso de pós-graduação em Aleitamento no Instituto Ciclos.
Esta publicação só está disponível em inglês até o momento.
Prof. Marcus Renato de Carvalho
www.agostodourado.com
ABDOMINAL TRAUMA in pediatrics part one.drhasanrajab
Abdominal trauma in pediatrics refers to injuries or damage to the abdominal organs in children. It can occur due to various causes such as falls, motor vehicle accidents, sports-related injuries, and physical abuse. Children are more vulnerable to abdominal trauma due to their unique anatomical and physiological characteristics. Signs and symptoms include abdominal pain, tenderness, distension, vomiting, and signs of shock. Diagnosis involves physical examination, imaging studies, and laboratory tests. Management depends on the severity and may involve conservative treatment or surgical intervention. Prevention is crucial in reducing the incidence of abdominal trauma in children.
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Basavarajeeyam is a Sreshta Sangraha grantha (Compiled book ), written by Neelkanta kotturu Basavaraja Virachita. It contains 25 Prakaranas, First 24 Chapters related to Rogas& 25th to Rasadravyas.
1. Advantages of Brain Disorder Language
from the Patient/Carer Perspective
✤ Laura (Collins) Lyster-Mensh, MS
May 5, 2012
ICED, Austin Texas
2. Boston University School of Medicine asks all individuals involved in the development and presentation of
Continuing Medical Education (CME) activities to disclose all relationships with commercial interests. This
information is disclosed to CME activity participants. Boston University School of Medicine has procedures to
resolve apparent conflicts of interest. In addition, presenters are asked to disclose when any discussion of
unapproved use of pharmaceuticals and devices is being discussed.
I, Laura (Collins) Lyster-Mensh, have no commercial relationships to disclose.
Jointly Sponsored by Boston University School of Medicine and
the Academy for Eating Disorders
27. Why this language matters
• Paradigm shift
• Implies urgency
• Calls for science literacy
• Puts EDs in context with other illnesses
• Acknowledges the challenge for the patient
• Align with the larger mental health field
• Many of the brain “problems” are POSITIVE traits
• Focuses parents on what they CAN do
28. What it doesn’t mean:
• An excuse to do nothing
• An excuse to pity or condescend
• Hopelessness
• Environment, and treatment, don’t matter
• Body image & eating concerns invalid
• That good parenting isn’t important
29.
30. “Thinking of my illness as a brain disorder has
helped me move past guilt and shame”
“ helps her understand why it is that if other people
don’t eat this doesn’t happen to them”
“As someone who spent decades as child, adolescent and adult with AN/BN, I know “six words from an enlightened clinician made
this is a brain disorder. I had to learn skills to help my brain recover. A large reason sense of all of it and took away decades of blame
why I have remained 'recovered' these past six years is the wonderful science and bewilderment from the whole extended
available today, who help me see my illness for what it was - a brain disorder. The family: "it's the brain dear, the brain"
science knowledge has empowered me and made sense of a four–decade long battle
that was largely fought in the dark.” June “adds legitimacy”
“...truly liberating. - JA. Melbourne
“a huge shift inside of me when I learned about the biological nature..the
despair began to be replaced with compassion and logical next steps”
”it was such a relief”
“It depersonalises the illness, which takes away the feelings of guilt and
responsibility. By understanding the biology of it, it becomes possible to manage
your life after recovery Hannah P., 4 years recovered, aged 20.
“Understanding that this is a brain disorder
helped my daughter not feel she was a treatment
failure or not motivated to get better. She simply “Once I found out that my daughter was
wasn't given the right help” predisposed to this illness due to her
“took away the guilt and blame biology, my husband and I were
and pointed to actual answers.” empowered to help her get better, rather
then think about all the things we had
done to ruin our child!” Erika, UK
“immensely comforting to remember I didn’t ‘do this to
myself’ out of weakness or self-centeredness or spite”
31. “...destigmatises it...simpler to explain (her) “led her to stop feeling that she herself was
condition to others, make them feel moire
comfortable in interacting with her and enlist their responsible for her disordered thoughts and self-
support.” Belinda C. destructive behaviors. She has room in her head
now for hope, and is working hard with an
excellent therapist towards accomplishing
remission.”
“renewed determination to
seek out effective treatment “With a background in
Autism and
for my long-term suffering “I was beyond Speech/language
young adult daughter” Kris pathology, after watching
B., US relieved as I my daughter disappear, I
knew this was a brain
always felt this disorder complicated by
malnourishment and
as a mom.” behavior that could be
modified/over-ridden/re-
Becky routed.”
“Knowing that it is a treatable brain “allows clarity in how to understand how the sufferer
disorder helped me to deal with my difficulties and how to support them in a way that results in
healing from the core - rather than managing symptoms in a
daughter's bizarre behavior and holding pattern forever.”
empowered me to help her recover.
It really motivated me to feed her
“Biological Language has FREED me so that I can help my daughter beat this disease.
and get her well.” Colleen
It has empowered me.” Alida R.
“made me feel empowered and became the foundation of my recovery.” Katie
32. “flipped me from being Mrs Hand-Wringing, Weepy,
Headless chicken into the empowered, informed mother “What better
that I am today...I have never heard of another
explanation that makes sense of our daughter's
way to engage a
anorexia.” C.B., UK parent’s
nurturing
“It made sense of what was previously a bewildering transformation of our active,
joyful, mature, sensible, intelligent and astute oldest daughter into a miserable, instinct and
confused, aggressive stranger, seemingly intent on self destruction.”
build hope,
strength and
“Frankly, I think that discussion of the
“I was better able to give her the purpose than to
unconditional love, compassion
eating disorder in personal terms is much
more stigmatizing to the patient than
and support that she needed.” help them
LKR
biological terms.“ A.J. Pennsylvania, US
understand their
child is an
“I was able to leave innocent; not a
guilty paralysis behind” recalcitrant.”
Tim, Australia
“To me the biological explanation makes perfect sense.” Rina
33. “The scariest thing for me was not that my daughter's brain might be involved in her
illness - that was only cause for optimism - but that her anorexia might be in any
way a legitimate 'lifestyle' choice. If her mental misery would persist unless she
could always be 'a little thinner' what hope could there ever be for a healthy mind
and a healthy body? ” E.B., Surrey, UK
“..hit home for me. Then, things just started clicking into place” Deb
“Suddenly everything made sense”
“neither stigmatizing
“liberating” nor dehumanizing.”
“freed me from the cesspool of guilt, worry and blame. “ CA, US
“The medical model invites optimism. It calls families forward --to
“it empowered me to discover and capitalize on their strengths. This language opens the
fight this head on and way for them to find the confidence they’ll need daily to nurture
with calm their loved ones to back to health.” Lydia, Illinois, US
determination”
G.M. Va.
“enabled me to get on with supporting recovery and not recrimination with a degree of calm,
consistency and tenacity that I am not sure I would otherwise have managed. “
Erica
“I stopped trying to bribe, talk, shout, scream and plead at my son to 'stop doing this'
to himself and to us, his parents. Instead I became calmer. I talked with him. I made
it clear that I was there, ready to listen to him. I stopped trying to 'reason' with the
ED. I stopped confronting him and nagging him.”
34. “The scariest thing for me was not that my daughter's brain might be involved in her
illness - that was only cause for optimism - but that her anorexia might be in any
way a legitimate 'lifestyle' choice. If her mental misery would persist unless she
could always be 'a little thinner' what hope could there ever be for a healthy mind
and a healthy body? ” E.B., Surrey, UK
“..hit home for me. Then, things just started clicking into place” Deb
“Suddenly everything made sense”
“neither stigmatizing
“liberating” nor dehumanizing.”
“freed me from the cesspool of guilt, worry and blame. “ CA, US
“The medical model invites optimism. It calls families forward --to
“it empowered me to discover and capitalize on their strengths. This language opens the
fight this head on and way for them to find the confidence they’ll need daily to nurture
with calm their loved ones to back to health.” Lydia, Illinois, US
determination”
G.M. Va.
“enabled me to get on with supporting recovery and not recrimination with a degree of calm,
consistency and tenacity that I am not sure I would otherwise have managed. “
Erica
“I stopped trying to bribe, talk, shout, scream and plead at my son to 'stop doing this'
to himself and to us, his parents. Instead I became calmer. I talked with him. I made
it clear that I was there, ready to listen to him. I stopped trying to 'reason' with the
ED. I stopped confronting him and nagging him.”
36. LAURA COLLINS LYSTER-MENSH
EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR
F.E.A.S.T.
FAMILIES EMPOWERED AND SUPPORTING TREATMENT OF EATING DISORDERS
FEAST-ED.ORG
LAURA@FEAST-ED.ORG
( 540) 227-8518
LAURA.COLLINS.EWYA ( SKYPE)
P.O. BOX 331, WARRENTON VA 20188 US
Editor's Notes
I have no commercial conflicts to declare, but I will declare myself a romantic. Yet I’ m here to discuss a pretty unromantic phrase.The term “ brain disorder ” seems to cause a range of reactions, some quite strong. What I hope to persuade you of in the next few moments is that the term brain disorder may be an opportunity, not a problem, and that by using it, or at least tolerating it – or other similar terms - we may better mobilize families to achieve what is our mutual goal: patients recovering and going on to live free of their eating disorder. Their brain disorder.
I use brain disorder as a compass, not a map. It is a direction, not a prescription. I do so in the belief that that these terms offer a special orientation for parents. I would argue that what parents hear and believe is crucial to most patients’ success in recovering and staying well - especially at the most important time: at first diagnosis. Parents are the ones seeking treatment, evaluating treatment options, cooperating with treatment, obstructing treatment - not to mention paying for and driving to treatment. Without the right orientation - which starts with language - parents struggle to support the patient and the clinical team. My experience with this languange is typical, so I’ll briefly describe my process.
In 2002 I thought I knew everything I needed to know about eating disorders, which was very little and involved a condescending pity and disdain for the sufferer and his or her parents. My understanding was that an eating disorder was a cry for help from a person damaged by life. After I realized my daughter had anorexia my first several encounters with books and local psychologists and a Google search confirmed my early impressions and I started to withdraw into self-recrimination and terror: I had not protected my daughter from harm. I began to abdicate my parental responsibilities to professionals who encouraged that thinking,
and to believe my daughter who pointed straight at her father and I and very credibly declared us and the world around her as toxic and her waning health to be a rational and understandable choice.
Luckily, a clue from my own childhood nagged at me: my father had been a psych grad student and I grew up hearing the history of schizophrenia and autism – where in the absence of another explanation everyone saw the thoughts and behaviors as exogenic – responses to outside messages – when they were often really coming from within. I also remembered that while the brain was susceptible to dis-order it is quite plastic – that experience, psychotherapy, nourishment, drugs, and love - all play a role in brain function.
Looking deeper into the issue, I realized a few – very few in 2002 – people in the eating disorder world were talking about eating disorders as a mental illness, and possibly an organic one. At the time this was very controversial and I was taken to task by the clinicians treating my daughter. I was told to “look within” myself for why my daughter was saying and doing and feeling this way. That eating disorders do no happen “in a vacuum.” I was told by other parents that I was “in denial.” And yet, as everyone in this room should agree: no one fully understands what leads to an eating disorder. All we KNOW is that something is terribly altered and that the organ with the symptoms is the brain. The brain is not functioning normally - by experience or predisposition or both.
Parents know this better than anyone: we watch someone we know transformed into someone we no longer recognize. I believe my daughter recovered because my husband and I understood the thoughts and feelings she was experiencing were primarily biological and that with sustained nutrition and therapy and love she could recover. Our understanding of her pathological drive for thinness, her phobia of certain foods, her social disconnect, and her inability to see the seriousness of her situation were brain-based and temporary – I believe to this day that this understanding saved her life and saved us – her loving family – from sinking into despair and anger and blame. Notably, at 24 and fully recovered, so does our daughter.
This stance kept us focused on normalizing eating and behaviors. It helped us identify and work with better clinicians. It gave us a way to explain to other people what we were doing and why. But we did this against a backdrop of a professional world that didn’t just use different words – they actively discouraged the ideas. Certainly, no one treating our daughter mentioned that something might be different about her brain. I speak to hundreds of families a year and this is still true for most.
When our family arrived at the offices of eating disorder specialists they told us they knew a great deal about our family, and our daughter’s life, just on the basis of her diagnosis. In fact, I would argue they knew a great deal about her brain. Her symptoms were the same as most people with anorexia, but her life was unique. With recovery she went from a person whose thoughts and behaviors were typical of anorexia to a person with genuine agency and free will. Anorexia stole her individuality: her brain disorder derailed her. Recovery, and learning to live well in her slightly different brain - even now - gave her back HER life.
I use ‘brain disorder’ to help parents understand that their loved one’s brain is built and working differently and that many of these thoughts and behaviors are understandable and common for those with an eating disorder. I use it to convey urgency and gravity - as deserving of family priority as any serious illness or injury. I use it to make it clear that parents need not be distracted from their important caregiving role by waiting to find underlying issues: that’s a witch hunt that most often ends in blaming the patient.
Most of all, I use this term because parents have rarely heard much about how the thoughts and behaviors of an eating disorder could be biologically based and while influenced by environment do not necessarily reflect it. They don’t know that the thoughts and even the exact words of patients are often so similar to others it could be a script for those with the same condition. Parents, unlike clinicians, have often never seen these behaviors or heard these pathological thoughts except in their own child and generally have no idea that this is a temporary and treatable condition not the lasting beliefs and chosen lifestyle of their loved one.
I use it to take the emphasis off eating, off society, off parenting, off appearance - though they all are important. I use it to bring it into the category of obsessive compulsive disorder, and anxiety disorders - and out of the category of willful behaviors and lifestyle choices. I find saying brain disorder medicalizes the condition in a good and optimistic way: separating the present state of thinking from the true will and desire of the patient and defusing conflict between parent and child. I say it to restore sympathy and make sense of what is otherwise incomprehensible.
I start with the brain – an organ of the body that is changed by and changes the environment as well as all body systems. The brain is nothing without the gut, the air, infancy, parenting, and society. But to start outside the brain or to treat the brain as if it is only a sail in the wind of experience is both incorrect and cruel.
The evidence that the brains of eating disorder patients are different, often from birth, is becoming clearer. The more I learn about those differences the more I appreciate the extraordinary work and courage successful treatment requires of patient, clinician, and family. Parents need to know how hard it is and why. We need to know that recovery must be protected by relapse prevention. We need to know that our loved one’s thoughts and emotions need nurturing and check ups just as the bones and heart.
I find parents desperately want and need a change of reference. Generally, we know our child and we know the culture we live in and we know what good and bad parenting is already. We need help orienting ourselves to this strange, perplexing change. We need to set shift from an accumulation of behaviors to a distinct, identifiable, problem. We also need reassurance that our loved one can successfully treated. And we need to know that the very traits that predispose our loved ones to an eating disorder are also often positive - ones that will serve them well in life after recovery: empathy, sensitivity, conscientiousness, care to detail, for example.
Whether we all agree or not about the relative role of environment, nourishment, upbringing, wiring, and peers: we can all agree that eating disorders damage the brain. We’re talking about developing young people and brains in a crucial stage of growth. Living with low or erratic levels of nourishment, thinking, and distress - these are part of the lifelong legacy to the organ, the brain. Parents naturally regard the brain as a critical organ - the home of our selves - under threat. We need to know that the risk of eating disorders is not simply of medical crisis, it is to the lifelong brain function of our loved one. We cannot afford dualism of mind and body especially because it treats body as if it doesn’t matter to mind. There is no such separation.
Can it do harm to use this term? Naturally. Parents who are so inclined can interpret “brain disorder” as something they have no power to change and no responsibility to address. We can mistakenly believe that the only solution to a brain problem is a pill. We can focus so much on calories and weight and physical measures that we lose sight of the whole person and the larger emotional needs beyond the eating disorder. Patients can be made to feel unlistened to; just a diagnosis and list of symptoms.
I understand and stand with those who reject a deterministic view of brain function and eating disorders. Neuroessentialism is no favor to our thinking here, and no favor to our friends the neuroscience researchers who, while looking in their toolbox for answers, do not discount the tools and arts of other fields. We have to work together.
The possible harms of any word choice are there. But how to manage the risk of harm is the job of this audience: whatever word you use to sum up an eating disorder to a family or to the media or to the patient you are starting a conversation but not stopping there. You are there to offer far more than a label, you are beginning a therapeutic treatment relationship that makes the terms you use make sense in context. Your work is that context.
I say don’t use the phrase ‘brain disorder’ if you don’t care for it, but I believe if we tell a family 100 words about society and one word on the brain we’ve set a course. If the family has mostly heard about thin models and family dysfunction and gets one paragraph on the brain it changes their response.
When you do use the word brain disorder you align yourself with people outside the narrow eating disorder world who use and understand this term: taking it out of the cul-de-sac I think it gets stuck in. You build bridges within the field, I think. And you align yourself with people like me, for what that’s worth, and we’re growing. I represent thousands of families and clinicians and researchers in dozens of countries and growing daily. There is no perfect term, no one word or phrase that tells the whole story of an eating disorder or, indeed, any illness but this phrase helps, I think.
Let's be frank. We're not just debating a phrase. We're revealing important disagreements in what we believe an eating disorder is and what causes it. Yet the lack of language clarity reveals more than just disagreement about meaning: it perpetuates it.
But I don’t believe this language difference, or the meanings that underlie them, have to continue to be a pendulum swing to extremes or a win/lose battle between perspectives: I think the eating disorder specialty – with its uniquely multidisciplinary scope - is in a position to be leaders in mental health. Dr. Insel of the NIMH said at our recent FEAST conference that eating disorders are a rare example of optimism in mental health because of advances in successful interventions.
Language matters, but none of these disagreements over language are more important than our common goal: of successful treatment for our sons and daughters and mothers and fathers and siblings and patients and friends. Because we are talking about a cluster of disorders that are not well understood and for which the treatments are notoriously poor. Our children die. We all know that those who survive too often suffer lives of silent and isolated misery. No matter how vehemently any one is pressing for their view of eating disorders unless anyone is arguing for incurability we can all agree there is far more, URGENTLY, to be known and done – preferably together.
Here is what I mean when I use this term, and similar language.
Here’s what I don’t mean, and don’t believe anyone who uses these terms means
A friend of mine uses the analogy of a 1980s Walkman and a modern iPod touch. They do the same basic thing but one draws from the experience of the past and adds technology of the present. And iPods, too, will be eclipsed for more nuanced and refined tools later. Words are just tools. But words matter.
How do families, and patients respond to this language? Mixed. Some do respond with affront – feeling keenly all the stigma that society heaps on “mental illness” and “brain disorder.” But these are some examples of the response that I’m seeing, and seeing more and more.
It is my experience after knowing hundreds and hundreds of families that the patients whose clinicians and families have taken a matter of fact stance toward the biological basis for brain disorders often feel HEARD, not insulted. They do not take refuge in lack of responsibility but feel understood for the enormous work they have to do to pursue recovery. I see families, even after years of unsuccessful interventions, transformed by the new knowledge that they are dealing with a genuine brain problem. With that new knowledge often comes new, effective, action.
The reaction that I hear most often is: “thank you” which is followed by anger “why didn't anyone tell me?”
The good news is that those who are deeply thinking about these issues are not that far apart, though they often only find that out after conflict forces them to talk. Are there extreme thinkers and fools? Of course - but they are ALL of our responsibility to address, and not an opportunity to use as "caution" against reasonable ideas. If one’s best critique against an idea is that there are fools who believe it- the argument is sadly weak.
I’m a parent, not a clinician. But I’m hearing so many professionals say “I’m afraid” to speak up on this topic. But I think you’ll be hearing more from families and colleagues in this new era, on language and on science. I’ll end with this - I propose that the term brain disorder is inadequate. What we need is to give it meaning with one additional word:
Treatable Brain Disorder Is that context. Without that word, all our worst fears of hopelessness and of biological determinism thrive. The skills of psychotherapy and the skills of parenthood are pivotal in eating disorder treatment not in spite of brain problems but because that is the way the brain is uniquely and exquisitely designed.