What is the Place of Newer Treatments in Eating Disorder Recovery?
Eating disorder recovery is hard work. It’s the monotony of fighting to eat a meal plan and avoid disordered behaviors. It’s the struggle to ignore and fight disordered thoughts. It’s the pressure to create completely new patterns of eating. And it’s the challenge to find new ways to tolerate life without using the eating disorder.
The hardest part is that recovery just takes time. What feels most difficult changes over months and even years. The progress isn’t linear. There are ups and downs, and the down times make it challenging to remain steadfast and hopeful. Recovery takes patience, diligence and perseverance.
While one day I hope there are clear medical diagnoses and treatments that make recovery easier, those options don’t exist right now. Eating disorders remain under the purview of psychiatry as mental illnesses with some initial indications of medical diseases that may contribute to the disorder. For now, the treatment approaches—as ineffective, and sometimes harmful, as they can be—available are still the gold standard.
There is a current cultural focus on treating mental health while promising prescriptive cures either via medications or targeted therapies. Valuing our psychological stability is a welcome change, but the simplification of healing into a stepwise or time-limited process is very misleading, especially in the realm of eating disorder treatment.
Despite all the newer tools to help people get better, I don’t find recovery to be much different for my patients. The newer forms of treatment increase the likelihood of getting better and seem to mitigate some of the most painful parts of recovery, yet the longterm challenge throughout the process remains.
Consistently looking into and utilizing new ways to help recovery is important for the eating disorder field. Clinical teams need to work together to harness the newest means to help people get well. At the same time, we can’t promise a faster, easier recovery. The path is still long and arduous. It demands people in recovery find a way to trust others and a determination to push through difficult periods.
I don’t mean to make the process of recovery seem hopeless by any means. Instead, I want people to know clearly what it looks like to get better and to prepare for the steps ahead of them while taking advantage of all different kinds of support they need to get well. That path is lined with more ways to get better than ever. Hard work will help people with eating disorders get to a place of being well.