Eamonn Meaney Counselling & Psychotherapy
  

Eating Disorders Counselling Waterford

eating disorders counselling waterford

    Get in touch





    Eating Disorders


    What are eating disorders?

    Eating disorders refer to complex conditions characterised by potentially life-threatening disturbances in a person’s eating habits and behaviours.
    Common behavioural patterns include:

    • Self-starvation by fasting and/or food restriction
    • Purging by self-induced vomiting, over-exercising, or laxative abuse
    • Binging by consuming quantities of food far beyond hunger levels


    More about eating disorders

    Eating disorders can be understood as a coping mechanism for emotional distress, or perhaps as indicative or symptomatic of other underlying issues. Consequently as the destructive cycle of the eating disorder wreaks physical and emotional harm, individuals commonly surrender their sense of themselves.

    Furthermore people may constantly monitor their weight, size and shape, viewing weight gain as catastrophic and weight loss as imperative. They will invariably hold distorted and negative self-views about their body image and their personalities. Low self-esteem generally overshadows suppression of their true needs whilst extreme mood swings intersperse and complicate everyday interactions with others.

    The following points about eating disorders are also worthy of attention:

    • Eating disorders can affect anyone and they are often perceived as high achievers
    • Individuals with an eating disorder use food as a control mechanism in their lives
    • People can and do recover from these conditions


    The main eating disorders fall into 3 categories:

    • Anorexia Nervosa
    • Bulimia Nervosa
    • Binge Eating Disorder



    Anorexia Nervosa

    Continuous and concerted actions to reach and maintain a weight lower than average for weight, age, sex, and height by restricting food or calories, over-exercising, or inducing vomiting are behaviours symptomatic of anorexia nervosa (HSE 2012). Approximately 1 in 250 women and 1 in 2000 men will develop anorexia typically around the age of 16 to 17 (HSE, 2015).

     

    Bulimia Nervosa

    Bulimia nervosa constitutes repeated episodes of binge eating but then purging through one or a combination of induced vomiting, excessive exercise, or misuse of laxatives, with detection difficult due to body weight often remaining within normal ranges. Bulimia is five times more common than anorexia with 90% of those with this condition being females from the ages of 18 to 19 (HSE, 2015).

     

    Binge Eating Disorders

    Binge eating disorders mean a person also engages in repeated binge eating episodes but without intentions or actions of ridding their body of food through unnatural or assisted means. Solitude can surround vicious diet-binge-shame cycles for 4% of the population many of whom will have a body mass index (BMI) in excess of 30. Males and females experience binge eating disorders in equal measure and it is thought to develop most often between the ages of 30 and 40 (HSE, 2015).

     

    What causes an eating disorder?

    Individuals may perceive that they are exercising control over food, their bodies and even their lives within the confines of an eating disorder, affording access to an otherwise unattainable sense of safety.

    Generally a combination of complex factors (biological, psychological, familial and socio-cultural) enable the development of an eating disorder. Common risk factors promoting their manifestation include:

    • Familial patterns of eating disorders, depression or substance misuse
    • Receiving regular criticism regarding body weight, size or shape and eating habits
    • Professional and external expectations to maintain slim or small body frames (dancers, models or athletes)
    • Specific personality characteristics, conditions and predispositions such as anxiety disorders, poor self-esteem, perfectionism and obsessive personality disorder
    • Episodes of sexual or emotional abuse or the death of a loved one
    • Conflict within the family home or within social circles
    • Consistent exposure to pressure or stress at school, university or in the workplace
    • Poor sense of own self-identity particularly in adolescence
    • Over investing emotionally in the opinions of peers or colleagues


    Support for family members

    So often the unseen casualties of eating disorders are the parents, partners, children or siblings whose lives are engulfed by shadows of shame, guilt, hurt, anger, depression and anxiety. Counselling provides an outlet to work through the turmoil and pain of these issues.

     

    Counselling and Psychotherapy for eating disorders

    Psychological and physical damage may be assessed through the multi-disciplinary teams with options for intervention including counselling, nutritional advice, psychiatric assessment or hospitalisation, or specialist voluntary groups like Bodywhys.

    Regarding psychotherapeutic work it is crucial that the emotional background of the eating disorder is carefully considered in developing an appropriate treatment approach. Acknowledging the eating disorder as an individual’s coping mechanism helps those around them to recognise the capacity of such a mindset to prejudice their recovery pace and pathway. Maintenance of their eating disorder may be conceived as critical to protect skewed views of their self-identity and to ensure survival in the world as they perceive it.

    Feelings of hopelessness, guilt, shame and self-loathing often accompany unintentional surrender to the eating disorder, hindering a person’s ability to seek help. Recovery addresses underlying issues, building self-esteem, and learning to manage and express feelings, as well as working on the physical and nutritional aspects of the disorder.

    Therefore the work undertaken through therapy may also run in tandem with one to one dietitian support. In summary, recovery requires great courage and commitment and is dependent on the will to change, accepting the eating disorder as a problem, developing new coping mechanisms and building resilience to life’s challenges.

    Left untreated, eating disorders can disrupt someone’s job or schoolwork, and sabotage relationships with family members and friends. Waterford Counselling Centre practices upon the premise that people can and do get better!

    Seeking and accepting support is a strength and not a weakness so please feel free to contact me to take the next step.

    Eating Disorders


    What are eating disorders?

    Eating disorders refer to complex conditions characterised by potentially life-threatening disturbances in a person’s eating habits and behaviours.
    Common behavioural patterns include:

    • Self-starvation by fasting and/or food restriction
    • Purging by self-induced vomiting, over-exercising, or laxative abuse
    • Binging by consuming quantities of food far beyond hunger levels


    More about eating disorders

    Eating disorders can be understood as a coping mechanism for emotional distress, or perhaps as indicative or symptomatic of other underlying issues. Consequently as the destructive cycle of the eating disorder wreaks physical and emotional harm, individuals commonly surrender their sense of themselves.

    Furthermore people may constantly monitor their weight, size and shape, viewing weight gain as catastrophic and weight loss as imperative. They will invariably hold distorted and negative self-views about their body image and their personalities. Low self-esteem generally overshadows suppression of their true needs whilst extreme mood swings intersperse and complicate everyday interactions with others.

    The following points about eating disorders are also worthy of attention:

    • Eating disorders can affect anyone and they are often perceived as high achievers
    • Individuals with an eating disorder use food as a control mechanism in their lives
    • People can and do recover from these conditions


    The main eating disorders fall into 3 categories:

    • Anorexia Nervosa
    • Bulimia Nervosa
    • Binge Eating Disorder



    Anorexia Nervosa

    Continuous and concerted actions to reach and maintain a weight lower than average for weight, age, sex, and height by restricting food or calories, over-exercising, or inducing vomiting are behaviours symptomatic of anorexia nervosa (HSE 2012). Approximately 1 in 250 women and 1 in 2000 men will develop anorexia typically around the age of 16 to 17 (HSE, 2015).

     

    Bulimia Nervosa

    Bulimia nervosa constitutes repeated episodes of binge eating but then purging through one or a combination of induced vomiting, excessive exercise, or misuse of laxatives, with detection difficult due to body weight often remaining within normal ranges. Bulimia is five times more common than anorexia with 90% of those with this condition being females from the ages of 18 to 19 (HSE, 2015).

     

    Binge Eating Disorders

    Binge eating disorders mean a person also engages in repeated binge eating episodes but without intentions or actions of ridding their body of food through unnatural or assisted means. Solitude can surround vicious diet-binge-shame cycles for 4% of the population many of whom will have a body mass index (BMI) in excess of 30. Males and females experience binge eating disorders in equal measure and it is thought to develop most often between the ages of 30 and 40 (HSE, 2015).

     

    What causes an eating disorder?

    Individuals may perceive that they are exercising control over food, their bodies and even their lives within the confines of an eating disorder, affording access to an otherwise unattainable sense of safety.

    Generally a combination of complex factors (biological, psychological, familial and socio-cultural) enable the development of an eating disorder. Common risk factors promoting their manifestation include:

    • Familial patterns of eating disorders, depression or substance misuse
    • Receiving regular criticism regarding body weight, size or shape and eating habits
    • Professional and external expectations to maintain slim or small body frames (dancers, models or athletes)
    • Specific personality characteristics, conditions and predispositions such as anxiety disorders, poor self-esteem, perfectionism and obsessive personality disorder
    • Episodes of sexual or emotional abuse or the death of a loved one
    • Conflict within the family home or within social circles
    • Consistent exposure to pressure or stress at school, university or in the workplace
    • Poor sense of own self-identity particularly in adolescence
    • Over investing emotionally in the opinions of peers or colleagues


    Support for family members

    So often the unseen casualties of eating disorders are the parents, partners, children or siblings whose lives are engulfed by shadows of shame, guilt, hurt, anger, depression and anxiety. Counselling provides an outlet to work through the turmoil and pain of these issues.

     

    Counselling and Psychotherapy for eating disorders

    Psychological and physical damage may be assessed through the multi-disciplinary teams with options for intervention including counselling, nutritional advice, psychiatric assessment or hospitalisation, or specialist voluntary groups like Bodywhys.

    Regarding psychotherapeutic work it is crucial that the emotional background of the eating disorder is carefully considered in developing an appropriate treatment approach. Acknowledging the eating disorder as an individual’s coping mechanism helps those around them to recognise the capacity of such a mindset to prejudice their recovery pace and pathway. Maintenance of their eating disorder may be conceived as critical to protect skewed views of their self-identity and to ensure survival in the world as they perceive it.

    Feelings of hopelessness, guilt, shame and self-loathing often accompany unintentional surrender to the eating disorder, hindering a person’s ability to seek help. Recovery addresses underlying issues, building self-esteem, and learning to manage and express feelings, as well as working on the physical and nutritional aspects of the disorder.

    Therefore the work undertaken through therapy may also run in tandem with one to one dietitian support. In summary, recovery requires great courage and commitment and is dependent on the will to change, accepting the eating disorder as a problem, developing new coping mechanisms and building resilience to life’s challenges.

    Left untreated, eating disorders can disrupt someone’s job or schoolwork, and sabotage relationships with family members and friends. Waterford Counselling Centre practices upon the premise that people can and do get better!

    Seeking and accepting support is a strength and not a weakness so please feel free to contact me to take the next step.

    waterford-counselling-eating-disorders

      Get in touch