The last few posts outlined my thoughts about how and why the eating disorder epidemic remains so strong and influential over decades. Social forces use psychiatric labels to systematically reinforce these illnesses to disenfranchise an entire group of people.
Theories are one thing, but the more important question for a clinician is what to do with these concepts.
There are several ways the eating disorder treatment community reinforces these beliefs and allows clinical acumen to support the sexism and bias inherent in these illnesses.
I’ll flesh out my thoughts about the three most important problems inherent in eating disorder treatment in the subsequent posts but will outline them here.
The underlying factor uniting these three is the lack of compassion, understanding and care at the center of these supposed clinical interventions. If mental health treatment is supposed to start from a place of openness and kindness, how can it be that the central tenets of eating disorder treatment ignore this sentiment completely?
The idealization of thinness implies for all people that thinness is within your grasp, a goal attainable with the right amount of will and perseverance. If you don’t reach the goal, then it is your fault. Eating disorder treatment adheres to this misguided belief by positing that eating disorders are also your fault. If you don’t get better, then you haven’t tried hard enough. Although psychiatric illness is considered largely biological, mental health providers don’t seem to talk about blame for illnesses other than for eating disorders.
Similarly, treatment programs run by finance companies, as I have discussed extensively in recent posts, use not only blame but the supposed utopia of “full recovery” as the holy grail to shame recalcitrant patients into submission. Without much guidance about how to get to full recovery, nor even a realistic sense of what that means, treatment program philosophy uses this nonsensical term to instill a sense of failure and blame in all patients when they don’t rescue the impossible.
The result of the false belief is that social media and outpatient treatment revolve around a concept far afield from what getting better from an eating disorder actually looks like.
The end result of blame is the extensive use of ultimatums in eating disorder treatment. When clinicians decide a patient is getting “too sick” or “not trying hard enough,” it is considered standard of care to make an ultimatum: get better, go into treatment or otherwise you can’t stay in therapy anymore. It’s unfathomable to me that people consider this step caring and ethical when the goal of care is to help people get better. How can clinicians sleep at night when they overtly blame their patients for not getting better?
I’ll talk more about these three issues—blame, “full recovery” and ultimatums—in the coming posts. Making changes to eating disorder treatment can transform a field guided by nefarious social forces and instead focus recovery on true healing from a physical, psychological and personal place.