Eating disorders devastate British families-survey
LONDON (Reuters Life!) - Relationship breakdown, divorce and problems at work commonly affect British families with eating disorders and only a small proportion get the support they need from health services, according to a survey.
In the survey, by Britain's leading eating disorders charity BEAT, 79 percent of families affected by eating disorders said they had caused lasting damage to their lives.
Some 1.1 million people in Britain are affected by anorexia, bulimia or binge eating, BEAT said in the survey published at the start of eating disorders awareness week.
Twenty percent of anorexia sufferers die, the highest mortality rate of any mental illness, BEAT said.
Guidelines on the treatment of eating disorders and on the need to involve family members in therapy -- published in 2004 by the National Institute of Health and Clinical Excellence (NICE) -- are not being followed, BEAT said.
"The cost of continuing to fail families is too high. Too many lives are damaged and destroyed by this most deadly of mental illnesses," the charity said in its report.
Only 12 percent of families, of 500 surveyed across the country, felt they had access to the support they needed and 23 percent had no support at all.
"We are shocked at their response and moved by the efforts they have to make to fight for the support that is theirs by right," BEAT added.
The survey found 35 percent of families felt excluded by the hospital from the care and treatment of the affected relative and only 45 percent were offered family therapy -- the evidence-based treatment of choice. Continued...







