World History: 1500 - 2001

Caro

Sunday, February 22, 2009

The Week Ahead: 2/23 - 2/27

Monday (2/23)
Essay 1: Class Work
GOAL: I will want to see everyone's outline and thesis statement by the end of class
HW: Work on Essay 1

Tuesday (2/24)
The Reign of Terror and Napoleon
-The Reign of Terror
--Reading
-Napoleon
--Notes & J/Es
HW: Textbook Reading, TBA

Wednesday (2/25)
-Napoleon
--Notes
--Congress of Vienna - HW
HW: Work on Essay 1

Thursday (2/26)
UNIT Review: 1492: Napoleon
--Handout/Worksheet
HW: FINAL draft of Essay 1

Friday (2/27)
DUE: Essay 1 (100pts), DBQ (10pts), Outline (10pts)
Exam Review
Introduction to writing IDs
--Practice
HW: Study for Exam 1


Eating disorders are a silent epidemic - and the epidemic is spreading.

At one extreme, nearly a third of America is considered to be obese, according to the Centers for Disease Control. As recently as 1990, in no state was more than 15 percent of the population obese. By 2006, at least 20 percent of the population was considered obese in all but four states.

While millions of Americans are eating themselves to death, millions more are starving themselves to death. Anorexia is not just for models and celebrities. The National Institute of Mental Health estimates that 1 percent of women and adolescent girls have this debilitating, potentially deadly disease. Males account for just 10 percent of all cases, but their numbers are growing.

Bulimia is even more common. Those with bulimia purge their food, abuse laxatives or exercise obsessively to control their weight. Although research suggests that up to 4 percent of college-aged women have bulimia, it is increasingly common among women and men of all ages.

Eating disorders are serious illnesses. If left untreated, an estimated 20 percent of those with anorexia will die from malnutrition and other factors. Obesity, conversely, can double a person's susceptibility to heart disease, diabetes and cancer.

In spite of these startling statistics, surprisingly little has been done to address this epidemic. National Eating Disorder Awareness Week, which begins tomorrow, is a start, but eating disorders are a serious problem 52 weeks a year.

It would be hard to argue that eating disorders have not received their fair share of media attention. The problem is that media portrayals have left the impression that eating disorders mostly affect the rich and famous, and are the result of character deficiency and poor upbringing.

The number of afflicted individuals strongly suggests that these popular beliefs fall far short of explaining eating disorders. More critically, these stereotypes obscure reality and leave us all spectacularly vulnerable to the severe human suffering and excessive societal cost these conditions create.

So how can we do better?

The first step is to increase awareness of the seriousness of eating disorders and to accept, as we do with other major diseases, that there are many types of eating disorders and likely many causes.

We need to be wary of the quick fix. The science of eating turns out to be a complex subject involving the interplay of genetics, biochemistry, nutrition and psychology. There will be no "one size fits all" solution.

Lack of research funding is a major problem. According to the National Eating Disorder Association, research funding works out to $1.20 a year for each person with an eating disorder, compared with $159 for each person with schizophrenia.

As adults, we need to model healthy attitudes and habits, ignore fad diets and educate our children better. Most people can maintain a healthy weight through nutrition and exercise. It's not just about willpower, though. Some need professional assistance.

Insurers are uncertain about how best to cover eating disorders. They cover some eating disorders as mental health problems, others as medical problems and still others as both. Regardless of how eating disorders are covered, they pose a challenge, because the medical impact is so costly.

The good news is that with proper treatment, many people fully recover. If we begin to recognize eating disorders as the national epidemic that they are, a far greater percentage of patients can recover fully and enjoy happy and healthier lives.

Stuart Koman is president and CEO of Walden Behavioral Care Inc. of Waltham and Northampton.

9 comments:

luangrath said...

I really like Fleet Foxes. I think their performance on SNL really did it for me- it was the only thing that I liked about the show!

Anonymous said...

Eating disorders are such a sad reality. :( I feel really bad for those who have anorexia/bulimia or who binge and can't control their eating. I remember freshman year I had problems with eating, but now I just enjoy what I eat cause eating food is great! :)

Food is a friend, not an enemy.

Lisa W.
3rd Period

luangrath said...

Oh and Fleet Foxes are also coming to Portland next month at the Crystal.

Mr. Caro said...

Lisa!

Congratulations! It is a testament to your strength! You better take IB Psych! We cover these disorders as well as others. You would do awesome in the class!

Ulysses, I too like them. Hmm, I only have two tracks of theirs however...

luangrath said...

I have zero. :[

Mr. Caro said...

You can copy mine!

Anonymous said...

Why thank you very much Mr. Caro! I already circled IB Psychology my forecasting sheet. I can't wait! I hope I can get in though...

Mr. Caro said...

If you don't, let me know I will make it happen!

Anonymous said...

Okay. Will do. Thanks! :D