I found Liz Fletchers visit to WGS very insightful and
interesting. One thing that I found very interesting that she mentioned was
that a lot of people think you have to have body dimorphic disorder you will
most likely develop an eating disorder when the fact of the matter is that is
not true. Many people have things about there body that they wish to change.
Being a girl that is normal. Basically she was saying just because you wish
your arms were a little more toned or your thighs were tinnier doesn’t necessarily
mean you are going to develop an eating disorder. Another thing she said that
caught my attention was anorexia nervosa has the highest death rate of any
other mental disease with a 60% death rate prematurely. She said that most frequently the patients die
by suicide. One statistic that she said shocked me was 8 million Americans have
eating disorders. That means 1 in 200 woman suffer from an eating disorder and
only 30-40% if people with anorexia recover from it because many of them do not
want to be treated for it because they think that is the only way they can
live. In a broader since not just talking about eating disorders she said that
1 in 5 Americans are being treated for a mental illness at any given time.
People who suffer from anorexia nervosa often times do not want to be treated
which means they don’t want to get better leading them to just get more sick.
Hopefully as time goes on we will know more information about this disease and
be able to help more people over come it. I was also shocked to find out that
one of the main reasons people don’t get treatment for it is because many
people’s insurance will not cover rehab or therapy sessions for it so many
people can not afford it causing them not to get treatment.
I was equally as shocked about the fact that insurance doesn't cover fees for treatment of that sort as well. I feel like anorexia for sure is a deadly/dangerous/popular enough disease to merit coverage. I think that says a lot about how money hungry our society can be honestly.
ReplyDeleteI found it shocking as well at the fact that 8 million Americans suffer from an eating disorder. I think people are scared to talk about eating disorders, but talking about them is the only way we can help stop them and help people who refuse help. Fashion trends will change and so will the norm of being thin. Instead of having jeans that you wear on skinny days, and jeans you wear on fat days, just wear what you're comfortable in. Be happy with your body, and get rid of jeans that do not fit.
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