Eating Disorders Help for Parents Can Improve Treatment Outcomes
Mothers Against Eating Disorders (MAED) a Facebook support group for mothers of eating disorder patients recently published an article on their web page: What We Wish Eating Disorder Treatment Centers Knew. The article opens with the words “Dear Treatment Center” and begins by thanking eating disorder treatment staff for all their efforts in trying to save their beloved children. It goes on to enumerate a few problems and to offer helpful suggestions to promote understanding and communication between staff and parents of patients in treatment.
Parents looking for quality treatment can learn from MAED and their experiences. With 3500 members, they provide wisdom any family can use when finding care for their loved-one.Jon Ciampi
How Eating Disorders Affect Relationships with Family and Other Loved Ones
Eating disorders are traumatic for everybody involved. Often, not considered is the affect on parents and siblings who live with the patient and who recognize that their beloved family member is in grave danger. Living with somebody who has an eating disorder can make family members mentally, emotionally and even physically sick too.
In many cases, in order to help the ED patient, the family needs help too. They need to learn skills like
• Coping with fear and shame
• Setting boundaries
• Taking care of oneself amid chaos
• How to talk to someone who has an eating disorder
• Learning when to let go of control with love
Eating With Family is a Good Opportunity to Assess a Patient’s Recovery Progress
However, if the patient is having difficulty with food the parents and other family may become terrified that their loved one is going backwards into danger. There should be support and advice for family to know how to help in these situations without pushing the patient further into the illness and harming his/her chances for recovery. It might be best if the family does not say anything to the patient about what they’re doing, but instead talks to the treatment therapist about what’s happening. If there were a line of communication open between family and treatment staff this could allow both parties to coordinate efforts and offer more effective help.
A Crucial Area That Can Improve Treatment Outcomes is Family Therapy for Eating Disorders
When a child is suffering from an eating disorder, parents are usually terrified and ashamed. A parent often feels responsible for the suffering and peril their child is enduring. What would be most helpful is to work with family members who desperately want and need to know how to help someone with an eating disorder.
Offering a Family Support Group as an integral part of treatment is a great way to facilitate communication and healing between family and the patient. The family’s concerns and needs could be addressed during these sessions. There could be training in how to best help the patient when they are at home and, just as important, how to take care of oneself and avoid becoming enmeshed totally in the patient’s sickness. Family members, especially parents, need help and support to cope with fear, guilt, and their desperate need to help.
MAED Requests Treatment Centers to Communicate with Family and Coordinate Treatment
Bright Heart Health Integrates Family Therapy Into Eating Disorder Treatment
We are the first recovery program completely available through video conferencing using telemedicine. Patients can attend group, meet with therapists, dieticians and physicians all from the convenience and privacy of home or anywhere else there’s an internet connection using their smartphone, tablet or computer. For more information about our program call (844) 884-4744 to speak to one of our dedicated and compassionate care coordinators. We accept most major insurance, including BCBS, Cigna, and Aetna.