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Anorexic Girls Encourage Each Other on "Pro-Ana" and "Thinspo" Websites

More websites are promoting anorexia and extreme thinness as a legitimate lifestyle choice for young women and teens. The websites feature "thinspiration" photos of females so emaciated they seem to be missing not only fat and muscle, but all human tissue except bones, according to an article in The New York Times on May 25, 2008. Although more boys are becoming anorexic, the overwhelming majority who suffer from this life-threatening disorder are girls.

The websites celebrate boniness as a thing of beauty achieved only through sacrifice and self-denial, reporter Virginia Heffernan writes. The captions on the portraits, some of them truly horrifying, tout the starving bodies as objects of admiration. For example, one girl wrote, "Skeleton, you are my friend. I will sacrifice all I have in life. Bones are beautiful." Another says, "Time spent wasting is not wasted time." A poetic teen writes, "I want to be so thin, light, airy that I don't leave a shadow. I can dance between the raindrops."

"Pro-ana" or pro-anorexia websites become communities where girls who are starving themselves share advice and encouragement about the best ways to avoid eating. Participants post and update their "CWs, HWs, and BWs" with their pictures. CW is current weight, HW is high weight, and BW is best weight. An anorexic's entire outlook and mood can depend on whether she is BW or HW.

The "thinspo" and "pro-ana" sites often have a defiant tone. Experts say these young women are striking a revolutionary pose against society and their families, firmly upholding their right to destroy themselves. Self-destructive females like Sylvia Plath and Virginia Wolfe become role models. One buzzword is "fierce." The goal is to be as thin and fierce as a pouting, strutting runway model.

Labels: pro-ana, self-destruction, encouragement

Posted By: Aspen Education Group 0 Comments

Eating Disorder Patients Not Screened for Self-Injury

A study out of the Stanford University School of Medicine has found that, though teenage eating disorder sufferers are more prone to self-injurious behavior (cutting, etc), they are rarely screened for it.

To see how often this happens and how often doctors proactively screen for the association, the investigators focused on the medical records of 1,432 patients between the ages of 10 and 21 years, who had sought treatment for an eating disorder. Source: - National Institutes of Health

The study found that more than 40 percent of patients had engaged in self-injurious behavior. Of that 40 percent, only about half had been screened for the behavior by medical professionals. Lead author Dr. Rebecka Peebles hopes the results of the study will encourage doctors to alter their “classic profile” for eating disorder patients.

Labels: self-esteem, self-destruction

Posted By: Jane St. Clair 1 Comment