sciencenewsnet.in

World Eating Disorders Action Day: One Person’s Experience

In high school, Sydney McLamb was a dancer and soccer player who was unconcerned about body image. When she left home for college, McLamb began to experience severe loneliness despite being surrounded by friends in a sorority. She started questioning her self-worth, which triggered eating disorder behaviors.

As friends and family began to notice changes in her eating habits, McLamb denied she needed help. As her eating disorder behaviors intensified, so did her distress around eating. McLamb recalls eating a chocolate bar in secret and, as a result, experiencing a significant panic attack. Her parents asked her to get help at the Eating Disorder Treatment and Research Program at UC San Diego Health.

“We drove to San Diego and in our hotel room I made a deal with my parents. I said, ‘I will go for two weeks and then I’m leaving. I’ll do it for you guys, but I don’t need this.’ I didn’t to want to give up what I had. You get attached to an eating disorder,” recalls McLamb.

McLamb was diagnosed with anorexia nervosa, which frequently requires prolonged treatment for weight restoration and medical stabilization. She was in the program for eight months and needed to take a one-year sabbatical from her college studies, but has since recovered and graduated.

To address her experience and offer insight into eating disorders, McLamb and Anne Cusack, PsyD, clinical psychologist at the Eating Disorder Treatment and Research Program and co-director the adult treatment program, are available to answer questions.

###