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Fighting Anorexia: No One to Blame
Dec. 5, 2005 Newsweek
issue - "The age of their youngest patients has slipped to 9 years old, and
doctors have begun to research the roots of this disease. Anorexia is probably
hard-wired, the new thinking goes, and the best treatment is a family affair."
In summary:
- "At a National Institute of Mental Health conference last spring,
anorexia's youngest victims were a small part of the official agenda—but
they were the only thing anyone talked about in the hallways..."
- "Six months ago the Eating
Disorders Program at Penn State began to treat the youngest ones,
too—20 of them so far, some as young as 8."
- "Doctors now compare anorexia to alcoholism and depression,
potentially fatal diseases that may be set off by environmental factors such
as stress or trauma, but have their roots in a complex combination of genes
and brain chemistry."
- "In a 2000 study published in The American Journal of Psychiatry,
researchers at Virginia Commonwealth University studied 2,163 female twins
and found that 77 of them suffered from symptoms of anorexia."
- "Anorexia is a killer—it has the highest mortality rate of any
mental illness, including depression. About half of anorexics get better.
About 10 percent of them die. The rest remain chronically ill..."
The full report Fighting
Anorexia: No One to Blame
By Peg Tyre
See also Eating Disorders page

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Revised: January 20, 2008
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