Mary Howden, pictured, is the clinical supervisor at Center for Hope of the Sierras, a residential treatment center in Reno for girls and women with eating disorders. Learn more at www.centerforhopeofthesierras.com,
Tell me a bit about the center.
We have two houses. It is a residential home thatโs been turned into an eating disorder facility. Each one has six beds in it. They come here for a variety of things. With eating disorders, you sometimes have dual diagnosisโsome come with just an eating disorder, some come with diabetes and an eating disorder, which is also something we specialize in. I think thereโs two or three places in the country that can do that. Girls stay anywhere from a minimum of 45 days to three months, six months, depending on what theyโre working on and the severity of their issues.
Are there certain criteria for someone to come to your center?
Yes and no. Thereโs a criteria where if their weight is too low, we canโt take them because they need to be in a hospital setting because they are in such great risk of heart failure. Somebody has to be medically cleared to be here. As far as the level or severity of their eating disorder, thatโs an issue with many women. A lot of women feel like throwing up their food three times a day is normal, because theyโve done it so long. Thereโs no real criteriaโif this is hampering your life, itโs taking control of your work life. Thereโs a questionnaire, and if you answer so many out of 10, thereโs a strong chance you need to get help. People will come to us because they say they really need to do something different because โthis is something thatโs ruining my life.โ
Some people think you have to look like Karen Carpenter to be anorexic when someone who looks perfectly normal could have an eating disorder.
For somebody with bulimia, they probably have a normal body weightโitโs not always based on that. Somebody could be purging 12 to 15 times a day and still have a normal body weight, but purging 12 to 15 times a day is not normal.
What are some common reasons people develop eating disorders?
Thereโs no one thing we can pinpoint, but from a family systems perspective, certain things will stick with a child early on about her weightโif someone else in the family is concerned about her weight. And more often than not, if a girl has bulimia, she probably comes from a family with more judgment and criticism. And Iโll put that another way: Thereโs a propensity for some of these girlsโthey kind of absorb some of the problems of the family. They want to fix everything. They have a lot of compassion, theyโre caretakers, they tend to want to help everybody else. That, plus society, all the things we have on TV, the things we read in magazines being promoted as the ideal body. And usually, these girls, we talk a lot about the foodโand people with eating disorders tend to have body issues right off the batโbut thereโs something beneath that. Theyโre not communicating what theyโre thinking, what theyโre feeling, the judgment and criticism they might feel from family members, high school peers, anything like that. Itโs hard to wrap up in one article, itโs such a massive topic.
What are we now learning about diabetes and eating disorders?
Weโre finding out a little bit more. For instance, a girl will come in with diabetes, and maybe she already had some issues with an eating disorder, or maybe there was some judgment issues where she felt she had to be perfect, and then sheโs diagnosed with diabetes. That adds another element to it. A lot of times theyโll learn this from other diabetics early on, like โOh, if you want to control your weight, I can show you how to do that.โ They can manipulate their insulin to lose weight. If theyโre dosing for carbs, they have to calculate how many carbs they have, and they have to give themselves so many units of insulin to account for that because their pancreas doesnโt work the same as ours does. So when they donโt take their insulin, the glucose just builds up in the blood. When the blood glucose levels get too high, the kidneys canโt handle it, and the glucose spills over into the urine. So instead of being used by the body, all of the calories in the glucose are excreted in the urine.
Why are we seeing this more?
Itโs not that itโs necessarily new, itโs that weโre all talking about it now and realizing that this is a form of an eating disorder.
What can parents and friends do if they think someone has an eating disorder?
If you suspect someone is binging, purging or restricting their food, I would absolutely have that conversation with that person. I think more often than not, families are nervous or scared and donโt want to say the wrong thing, so it goes unnoticed. Theyโll say, โI noticed youโre starting to lose weight, but I didnโt know what to say.โ But if I were a parent with a child I suspected had an eating disorder, Iโd get online and start reading.
What are some signs of eating disorders or ways people hide them?
Thereโs lots of different ways. With binging, someone will eat an inordinate amount of food and either hide their food in their room or a cupboard somewhere behind boxes, and if youโre the parent paying for the food, youโll notice youโre buying food a lot. Somebody with bulimia can spend up to $300 a day, maybe more, thatโs the worst-case scenario Iโve heard. Itโs an expensive habit. If you suspect theyโre purging, you can lift up the toilet seat. That sounds gross, but if theyโre purging, they might not be cleaning the toilet seat; you can check that. It can feel sneaky, and I donโt really want parents running around being sneaky. I think being upfront saying, โYouโre in your room, you donโt talk a lot, you donโt eat with the family anymore โฆโ Someone with an eating disorder will often come up with excuses for why they wonโt eat with the family, like โI already ate with my friends; Iโm going to eat later.โ Then thereโs the social isolation pieceโthey donโt go out with their friends anymore, they donโt do anything.
So much of going out with friends is about eating, like going for pizza or ice cream. So theyโll say, โOh, Iโm a vegan now, so I donโt eat milk or cheese.โ
Exactly.
How can new parents help prevent eating disorders in their children who are babies or young now?
How you feel about your body is really important. I have two girls and a boy, and theyโre grown now. But how you feel about yourself and talk about yourselfโa lot of women will look in the mirror and go, โOh, I look so fat today,โ not thinking about it, but that little girl is sitting a couple of feet away and listening to everything you say. If everything in the house is diet, if there are never cookies in the house or good-food, bad-food, where parents say thatโs not healthy โฆ
So we should have cookies in the house?
Oh yeah! I think we should be teaching them moderation, not โThatโs bad, thatโs bad.โ โฆ We do follow the intuitive eating philosophy. Weโre all born intuitive. Babies cry when theyโre hungry. Something gets crossed at some point, and we stop being intuitive because the rules start to get too rigidโlike โI canโt eat that,โ and all the sudden theyโre eating lettuce and mustard, and thatโs all theyโre allowing themselves to eat. So we teach moderation and balance, not just with food but in life.
