Just so everyone knows - we're having a meeting on Thursday and we will update where too from here once that's over.
:)
Tuesday, April 29, 2008
Monday, April 21, 2008
Stateline Transcript!
Ok, so after much begging, I FINALLY got to see the Stateline that Hannah recorded for me (Thanks Hannah) but I can't keep it :'( Pitty cos I really wanted to look at myself forever. /Sarcasm.
I thought I would post the transcript. Oneday we will work out how to put the entry up on youtube for the viewing pleasure of the masses.
We will also scan in a copy of City News (once my scanner is rescued from the grave) and when the others update they can give you more details of the interview and what it's like to be under cameras and lights! lol.
I will stop babbling (and you can call me Brooke if you like...and please don't be offended if your name is Brooke. It is a very pretty name!)
Here is the transcript:
1300 550 236 Eating Disorders Foundation VictoriaCATHERINE GARRETT, PRESENTER: Eating disorders such as bulimia and anorexia are every parent's nightmare. They're psychiatric illnesses that affect mostly teenage girls. Eating disorders have one of the highest death rates of any psychiatric condition. Often blamed on the media's obsession with skinny models and celebrities, the causes are more complex than that. So, too, are the cures.A very brave trio of young women agreed to speak to Stateline about their experiences with an eating disorder and their concerns about the lack of treatment available in Canberra.KATE SCOTT: It happened quite suddenly and quite quickly with me. It happened in a really sort of steep curve. I just spiralled down very quickly.HANNAH MCALISTER: I stopped going to school. I couldn't get out of bed, I was too cold, I was too tired. I didn't have the energy. I didn't think there was any way out. I thought I was stuck. I thought I am going to have to die to get out of thisNOELLE GRAHAM: It's a devastating illness for the person and it's a devastating illness for the family.DR VIVIENNE LEWIS, CLINICAL PSYCHOLOGIST, UC: Nobody would ever wish an eating disorder upon themselves or even upon their worst enemy. It's a horrible disorder to have, a horrible mental illness to have.Primarily it does tend to be society's obsession with thinness and appearance and looking a particular way and that's certainly is the initial manifestation of it. However what tends to actually make somebody develop an eating disorder are numerous other factors, such as genetic, so where mum or dad or somebody else might have suffered from an eating disorder, where there's been a huge stress that's occurred. Certainly teasing and bullying about appearance, peer pressure or a general feeling of low self-esteem or self-worth.NOELLE GRAHAM: Look, I think the reasons are different for everybody. I was bullied a lot in school and I'm pretty sure that that didn't help. I was teased about my name, mainly: Noelle, Christmas carol, that kind of thing. Clothes, my hair was long and I had glasses and then I ended up getting braces.KATE SCOTT: I think things like my brother suffering from leukaemia when he was quite young, that was very stressful, having very high achieving parents, going to an all girls school. Being in year 11 and being very high achieving. I think all of those qualities probably all added up. But having said that I don't think every single person who goes to an all girls school will end up with an eating disorder. So I think it's a very individual thing. and I'm not sure that I myself can even pinpoint it.HANNAH MCALISTER: I actually developed depression before I developed an eating disorder and I found that really hard to deal with. I wasn't getting appropriate treatment for my depression and I didn't decide to get an eating disorder but eating less was sort of... it was something that made me feel better.KATE SCOTT: I was put into hospital at about the age of 16. I was halfway through year 11 and I was hospitalised with all over the place electrolyte levels, heart rate was abnormal, so I was put in for medical reasons. I was put into a private psychiatric hospital in Canberra which did not specialise in eating disorders and I was there for two months, including my 17th birthday.HANNAH MCALISTER: My first GP, I don't think she knew how to deal with eating disorders. I don't think she intentionally meant to be hurtful. But I don't think there was enough education around. I don't think she understood. She would say things like, you know, I have sick babies in the waiting room who need my attention, I don't want to waste my time on you. She took me behind a curtain, got my mum out of the room so no one could hear and basically, you know, told me I was a liar, told me that I was doing this to hurt my family, and that's really upsetting because that's a professional, that's someone who's supposed to know how to deal with these things.I've been hospitalised 17 times. I've been hospitalised in Canberra first. In a medical ward where they do tube feeding and bed rest. They don't really do any therapy. It's a weight gain program. I've been hospitalised in Sydney at a specialist eating disorders unit which has been the most helpful place I've been to. The problem with that is it's a private hospital, it's very expensive and it's in Sydney.NOELLE GRAHAM: For me, I went and saw a doctor, and from there I was referred on to the Eating Disorders Program, which... they offered me five one-hour sessions of cognitive behavioural therapy which wasn't enough. I ended up going to Melbourne for treatment because my mum could see that I wasn't getting any better and likely that I wouldn't get any better while I was in Canberra. So she found this particular program in Melbourne and, yeah, I went along to a workshop that they ran for two days and it was the worst two days of my life because it was kind of exposing everything that was going through my head to a whole room of people and I didn't think that other people felt like this. I thought, you know, maybe I was just going crazy.CATHERINE GARRETT: Is it good enough that these girls are having to travel interstate to get help?VIVIENNE LEWIS: I don't think so. I think you should be able to receive treatment where you're living, especially because eating disorders require the family being involved in treatment as well. What we need is we need better funding so that we can have more of the services that we've currently got.KATE SCOTT: I actually found the programs and the psychiatrists that I was seeing more of a negative effect than a positive effect because I was treated like a naughty little child. So my treatment experience in terms of medical professionals was quite a negative one and it left me, after sort of being through this journey, it left me feeling quite upset with the way Canberra and really anywhere deals with eating disorders and that's part of the reason why I'm here today is because we want to fight that and we want to actually say that there has to be better care.HANNAH MCALISTER: The hospital experience in Canberra is horrible. I've been hospitalised in a psychiatric ward. It isn't a good environment if you're 16.NOELLE GRAHAM: It's not tailored to individual needs and I think that's something that really needs to change because every eating disorder is different. Every eating disorder sufferer is different and you can't just put everyone in a box and go, OK, they're done now, they've got an eating disorder. You can't just fix the illness like that.VIVIENNE LEWIS: Getting the treatment early, so having a parent or teacher recognise that there are problems really early on so we know that those that seek early treatment have much more effective outcomes. So people with an eating disorder tend to do best when they see a psychologist, dietitian, GP, maybe a psychiatrist as well because eating disorders are quite severe mental illnesses and where the school is supportive of the adolescents as well and friends and family.It's a very difficult disorder to treat. It tends to be very ingrained and people have often held beliefs about their bodies or poor self-esteem for a very long time, so you're talking about trying to reverse years of self-loathing.CATHERINE GARRETT: What is the head space you're in when you're anorexic?HANNAH MCALISTER: At the beginning, it's a purposeful sort of, you know, dieting losing weight type thing. But then it turns into something else and I did not honestly feel as though I had any control over what I could do. I remember thinking, when I was at my worst, there is no way I can get out of this, I am stuck. I could not imagine beginning to eat again and the weight gain that would go with that.NOELLE GRAHAM: I couldn't see it for a very long time but then I could. But I couldn't stop because I was too far into it that I don't even know what I was doing it for but I had to keep going. I had to keep trying to lose weight. I had to keep going, keep going. That kind of thing.CATHERINE GARRETT: Is that sort of punishment? Self-punishment or control?NOELLE GRAHAM: Definitely, it's punishment, and guilt and control and self- hatred. I find it so hard to explain just how much you hate yourself when you're in that headspace. You would do anything to disappear because, you know, you're a burden on your family, you don't deserve to be alive, you don't deserve anything. It's not a disease of vanity and it's not a choice. And so many people have said, you know, you're doing this to be a brat, you're just doing this because you want attention from your mum.And that's... I mean, I love my mum dearly but that's not true. That's not why I was doing it. I was doing it because I hated myself. I figured that was the easiest way to punish myself.HANNAH MCALISTER: It just seems like it's been forever! It seems like it's been such a long time and I can't believe that I've spent so much time doing this, in and out of hospital so many times, not being able to study, not being able to hold down a job, not being able to live a normal life, not being able to have normal relationships. It's just... and just to think that it started with, oh, maybe it would be cool if I lost some weight and it turned into something I haven't manage to get out of yet.For my story I would like people to know that although it takes a long time, you will get there in the end. Like, I've been doing this for a long time and it seems like it's taken forever, but when I look back at what I've done, I can see that I have come a long way and it's really important to recognise that it's hard, it's horrible, it's just an awful place to be in. But, you know, I've seen people get better and I believe that I can get better and that's the main thing.KATE SCOTT: It wasn't until I got out that I realised that there are a lot of hard yards to go because getting to a healthy weight's one thing but getting to a healthy head space is another. And the healthy head space is so hard.We do want to make a difference, we do want to set up support groups and that people understand that this is an illness that affects not only the sufferer but the families and that everyone needs as much support as they can get.BACK ANNOUNCEMENT: CATHERINE GARRETT: AND THOSE IMPRESSIVE YOUNG WOMEN - ARE PETITIONING - HEALTH MINISTER - KATY GALLAGHER - FOR FUNDS TO IMPROVE TREATMENT OPTIONS - WE'LL LET YOU KNOW HOW THEY GO. WE'LL ALSO - HAVE SOME USEFUL LINKS - ON OUR WEBSITE ON MONDAY - IF YOU'RE WORRIED ABOUT YOURSELF - OR SOMEONE IN YOUR FAMILY - YOU CAN CALL EATING DISORDERS VICTORIA ON 1300 550 236.THE PHONE IS ANSWERED DURING NORMAL BUSINESS HOURS - BUT IN THE MEANTIME YOU CAN LEAVE A MESSAGE. THEY WILL CALL YOU BACK - AND THEY WILL BE DISCREET.
<3
Noelle
I thought I would post the transcript. Oneday we will work out how to put the entry up on youtube for the viewing pleasure of the masses.
We will also scan in a copy of City News (once my scanner is rescued from the grave) and when the others update they can give you more details of the interview and what it's like to be under cameras and lights! lol.
I will stop babbling (and you can call me Brooke if you like...and please don't be offended if your name is Brooke. It is a very pretty name!)
Here is the transcript:
1300 550 236 Eating Disorders Foundation VictoriaCATHERINE GARRETT, PRESENTER: Eating disorders such as bulimia and anorexia are every parent's nightmare. They're psychiatric illnesses that affect mostly teenage girls. Eating disorders have one of the highest death rates of any psychiatric condition. Often blamed on the media's obsession with skinny models and celebrities, the causes are more complex than that. So, too, are the cures.A very brave trio of young women agreed to speak to Stateline about their experiences with an eating disorder and their concerns about the lack of treatment available in Canberra.KATE SCOTT: It happened quite suddenly and quite quickly with me. It happened in a really sort of steep curve. I just spiralled down very quickly.HANNAH MCALISTER: I stopped going to school. I couldn't get out of bed, I was too cold, I was too tired. I didn't have the energy. I didn't think there was any way out. I thought I was stuck. I thought I am going to have to die to get out of thisNOELLE GRAHAM: It's a devastating illness for the person and it's a devastating illness for the family.DR VIVIENNE LEWIS, CLINICAL PSYCHOLOGIST, UC: Nobody would ever wish an eating disorder upon themselves or even upon their worst enemy. It's a horrible disorder to have, a horrible mental illness to have.Primarily it does tend to be society's obsession with thinness and appearance and looking a particular way and that's certainly is the initial manifestation of it. However what tends to actually make somebody develop an eating disorder are numerous other factors, such as genetic, so where mum or dad or somebody else might have suffered from an eating disorder, where there's been a huge stress that's occurred. Certainly teasing and bullying about appearance, peer pressure or a general feeling of low self-esteem or self-worth.NOELLE GRAHAM: Look, I think the reasons are different for everybody. I was bullied a lot in school and I'm pretty sure that that didn't help. I was teased about my name, mainly: Noelle, Christmas carol, that kind of thing. Clothes, my hair was long and I had glasses and then I ended up getting braces.KATE SCOTT: I think things like my brother suffering from leukaemia when he was quite young, that was very stressful, having very high achieving parents, going to an all girls school. Being in year 11 and being very high achieving. I think all of those qualities probably all added up. But having said that I don't think every single person who goes to an all girls school will end up with an eating disorder. So I think it's a very individual thing. and I'm not sure that I myself can even pinpoint it.HANNAH MCALISTER: I actually developed depression before I developed an eating disorder and I found that really hard to deal with. I wasn't getting appropriate treatment for my depression and I didn't decide to get an eating disorder but eating less was sort of... it was something that made me feel better.KATE SCOTT: I was put into hospital at about the age of 16. I was halfway through year 11 and I was hospitalised with all over the place electrolyte levels, heart rate was abnormal, so I was put in for medical reasons. I was put into a private psychiatric hospital in Canberra which did not specialise in eating disorders and I was there for two months, including my 17th birthday.HANNAH MCALISTER: My first GP, I don't think she knew how to deal with eating disorders. I don't think she intentionally meant to be hurtful. But I don't think there was enough education around. I don't think she understood. She would say things like, you know, I have sick babies in the waiting room who need my attention, I don't want to waste my time on you. She took me behind a curtain, got my mum out of the room so no one could hear and basically, you know, told me I was a liar, told me that I was doing this to hurt my family, and that's really upsetting because that's a professional, that's someone who's supposed to know how to deal with these things.I've been hospitalised 17 times. I've been hospitalised in Canberra first. In a medical ward where they do tube feeding and bed rest. They don't really do any therapy. It's a weight gain program. I've been hospitalised in Sydney at a specialist eating disorders unit which has been the most helpful place I've been to. The problem with that is it's a private hospital, it's very expensive and it's in Sydney.NOELLE GRAHAM: For me, I went and saw a doctor, and from there I was referred on to the Eating Disorders Program, which... they offered me five one-hour sessions of cognitive behavioural therapy which wasn't enough. I ended up going to Melbourne for treatment because my mum could see that I wasn't getting any better and likely that I wouldn't get any better while I was in Canberra. So she found this particular program in Melbourne and, yeah, I went along to a workshop that they ran for two days and it was the worst two days of my life because it was kind of exposing everything that was going through my head to a whole room of people and I didn't think that other people felt like this. I thought, you know, maybe I was just going crazy.CATHERINE GARRETT: Is it good enough that these girls are having to travel interstate to get help?VIVIENNE LEWIS: I don't think so. I think you should be able to receive treatment where you're living, especially because eating disorders require the family being involved in treatment as well. What we need is we need better funding so that we can have more of the services that we've currently got.KATE SCOTT: I actually found the programs and the psychiatrists that I was seeing more of a negative effect than a positive effect because I was treated like a naughty little child. So my treatment experience in terms of medical professionals was quite a negative one and it left me, after sort of being through this journey, it left me feeling quite upset with the way Canberra and really anywhere deals with eating disorders and that's part of the reason why I'm here today is because we want to fight that and we want to actually say that there has to be better care.HANNAH MCALISTER: The hospital experience in Canberra is horrible. I've been hospitalised in a psychiatric ward. It isn't a good environment if you're 16.NOELLE GRAHAM: It's not tailored to individual needs and I think that's something that really needs to change because every eating disorder is different. Every eating disorder sufferer is different and you can't just put everyone in a box and go, OK, they're done now, they've got an eating disorder. You can't just fix the illness like that.VIVIENNE LEWIS: Getting the treatment early, so having a parent or teacher recognise that there are problems really early on so we know that those that seek early treatment have much more effective outcomes. So people with an eating disorder tend to do best when they see a psychologist, dietitian, GP, maybe a psychiatrist as well because eating disorders are quite severe mental illnesses and where the school is supportive of the adolescents as well and friends and family.It's a very difficult disorder to treat. It tends to be very ingrained and people have often held beliefs about their bodies or poor self-esteem for a very long time, so you're talking about trying to reverse years of self-loathing.CATHERINE GARRETT: What is the head space you're in when you're anorexic?HANNAH MCALISTER: At the beginning, it's a purposeful sort of, you know, dieting losing weight type thing. But then it turns into something else and I did not honestly feel as though I had any control over what I could do. I remember thinking, when I was at my worst, there is no way I can get out of this, I am stuck. I could not imagine beginning to eat again and the weight gain that would go with that.NOELLE GRAHAM: I couldn't see it for a very long time but then I could. But I couldn't stop because I was too far into it that I don't even know what I was doing it for but I had to keep going. I had to keep trying to lose weight. I had to keep going, keep going. That kind of thing.CATHERINE GARRETT: Is that sort of punishment? Self-punishment or control?NOELLE GRAHAM: Definitely, it's punishment, and guilt and control and self- hatred. I find it so hard to explain just how much you hate yourself when you're in that headspace. You would do anything to disappear because, you know, you're a burden on your family, you don't deserve to be alive, you don't deserve anything. It's not a disease of vanity and it's not a choice. And so many people have said, you know, you're doing this to be a brat, you're just doing this because you want attention from your mum.And that's... I mean, I love my mum dearly but that's not true. That's not why I was doing it. I was doing it because I hated myself. I figured that was the easiest way to punish myself.HANNAH MCALISTER: It just seems like it's been forever! It seems like it's been such a long time and I can't believe that I've spent so much time doing this, in and out of hospital so many times, not being able to study, not being able to hold down a job, not being able to live a normal life, not being able to have normal relationships. It's just... and just to think that it started with, oh, maybe it would be cool if I lost some weight and it turned into something I haven't manage to get out of yet.For my story I would like people to know that although it takes a long time, you will get there in the end. Like, I've been doing this for a long time and it seems like it's taken forever, but when I look back at what I've done, I can see that I have come a long way and it's really important to recognise that it's hard, it's horrible, it's just an awful place to be in. But, you know, I've seen people get better and I believe that I can get better and that's the main thing.KATE SCOTT: It wasn't until I got out that I realised that there are a lot of hard yards to go because getting to a healthy weight's one thing but getting to a healthy head space is another. And the healthy head space is so hard.We do want to make a difference, we do want to set up support groups and that people understand that this is an illness that affects not only the sufferer but the families and that everyone needs as much support as they can get.BACK ANNOUNCEMENT: CATHERINE GARRETT: AND THOSE IMPRESSIVE YOUNG WOMEN - ARE PETITIONING - HEALTH MINISTER - KATY GALLAGHER - FOR FUNDS TO IMPROVE TREATMENT OPTIONS - WE'LL LET YOU KNOW HOW THEY GO. WE'LL ALSO - HAVE SOME USEFUL LINKS - ON OUR WEBSITE ON MONDAY - IF YOU'RE WORRIED ABOUT YOURSELF - OR SOMEONE IN YOUR FAMILY - YOU CAN CALL EATING DISORDERS VICTORIA ON 1300 550 236.THE PHONE IS ANSWERED DURING NORMAL BUSINESS HOURS - BUT IN THE MEANTIME YOU CAN LEAVE A MESSAGE. THEY WILL CALL YOU BACK - AND THEY WILL BE DISCREET.
<3
Noelle
Thursday, April 17, 2008
City News and Stateline!
Well - sorry for so long no update guys! I think we've all been super busy with our "other" lives.
This week we're in the City News (when I have more time/energy I will scan the article in!) and we're on Stateline tomorrow night, 7:30pm for ACT Viewers. Not sure if this can be streamed from the website or not.
Filming was pretty cool (although extremely embarrasing for me as I am very camera shy!)
Will update after I've seen our TV efforts! *runs and hides*
Noelle xoxo.
This week we're in the City News (when I have more time/energy I will scan the article in!) and we're on Stateline tomorrow night, 7:30pm for ACT Viewers. Not sure if this can be streamed from the website or not.
Filming was pretty cool (although extremely embarrasing for me as I am very camera shy!)
Will update after I've seen our TV efforts! *runs and hides*
Noelle xoxo.
Thursday, April 10, 2008
Wow what a busy day!
We had the launch for our Youth Week project today which went well. We set up all our beautifully painted scales outside the legislative assembly. Noelle did a wonderful job at MC and Katy and I spoke, along with Vivienne Lewis and Jacqui Burke (shadow health minister). Afterwards we ran around Civic like crazy people getting people to sign our petition.
We gave out the address of our blog to lots of people so hopefully they're reading this! We really want as many people as possible to be involved in and to know about what we are trying to do. Quite a few people mentioned seeing us in the paper so yay! We got some really good responses from people and most people were interested in what we are doing but on the other hand we had some people who just ignored us. Now I have more appreciation for those annoying people who try to get you to give to charities and stuff who I always ignore.
Anyway! To the photos!


Here we have Noelle, myself (Hannah) and Katy with our scale footpath outside the Legislative Assembly.
We had the launch for our Youth Week project today which went well. We set up all our beautifully painted scales outside the legislative assembly. Noelle did a wonderful job at MC and Katy and I spoke, along with Vivienne Lewis and Jacqui Burke (shadow health minister). Afterwards we ran around Civic like crazy people getting people to sign our petition.
We gave out the address of our blog to lots of people so hopefully they're reading this! We really want as many people as possible to be involved in and to know about what we are trying to do. Quite a few people mentioned seeing us in the paper so yay! We got some really good responses from people and most people were interested in what we are doing but on the other hand we had some people who just ignored us. Now I have more appreciation for those annoying people who try to get you to give to charities and stuff who I always ignore.
Anyway! To the photos!


Here we have Noelle, myself (Hannah) and Katy with our scale footpath outside the Legislative Assembly.
Sunday, April 6, 2008
Sunday Canberra Times Feature - woo!!!



Ok, well today we were FEATURED in the Sunday Canberra Times. This is very exciting. We were under the impression that "feature" meant medium sized picture and half a page of text. We did not realize that "feature" meant 2.5 pages!!! So we are very excited :)
As my scanner has passed away recently, I will be typing and taking pictures of the articles, so don't mind the poor-ish quality. Perhaps Kat or Hannah will be kind enough to scan them in.
On the front page of the paper it says:
Too young to diet
By Emily Sherlock (she's really nice, btw)
CHILDREN as young as siz are so frightened of becoming overweight they are adopiting dangerous dieting behavior, a University of Canberra psychologist has warned.
Clinical psychologist, lecturer and researcher Vivienne Lewis said nine and 10-year-old boys and girls in the ACT were also expressing the desire to be thinner and feared becoming fat as adults.
Much of the recent media and social attention on obesity could be fuelling their fears.
"Children don't live in a vacuum but they hear stuff [about obesity]," she said. "They hear mum and dad talking or older siblings talking about it and about dieting and losing weight and they see it on television.
"I think it is alarming that children who have no even hit puberty are already idolising thin body types."
The finding comes as reports of eating disorders in children appear to be escalating, with some children as young as nine seeking professional treatment.
On pages 10-11 the feature contines. The first story is:
Australians Plagued by a Body Image Crisis
Eating Disorder sufferers launch a full-scale campaign to raise awareness of problem
By Emily Sherlock
IF YOU have or have had an eating disorder you can read the same pain, frustration and emptiness in the eyes of others living with it, suffers say.
Noelle Graham, 18, of Yarralumla said, "It is like they have vacated.
"People have always told me they knoew I was in trouble from the minute my eyes clouded over. They were like 'Noelle is not there anymore.'
"And it is true, at my treatment centre if you look at some of the really, really sick clients their eyes are clouded and they are not looking at you clearly, they are not in their head - it is probably becuase at the moment their head is too difficult a place to be."
Two other young women nodded in agreement.
All three have lived with eating disorders for most of their adolescent live sand have banded together to speak out about the illness which claims the lives of hundreds of young women - and men - each year.
They are also frustrated by what they see as the lack of support and treatment services avaliable in the ACT, poor education in the wider community and stigma still attached to the disease.
Hannah McAlilster, 20, of Queanbeyan has battled anorexia for five years, and said judgement from peers and the community was one of the biuggest challenges.
"A lot of people when the found out I had an eating disorder would say things like 'she doesn't really have an eating disorder - she is just doing it for attention' or 'she doens't look like she has an eating disorder' and it wasn't until I lost a significant amount of weight that people actually believed me," she said.
"I just really want people to understand what it is like and understand that it is not something that you choose, you don't decide to get an eating disorder becuase you want the attention, you can't choose it."
Kathryn Scott, 18, of Queanbeyan agrees.
"There is a lot of misunderstanding...Some people think it is a whole bunch of middle-class rich girls in high school who want to be thin and look like tabloid magazines and that is not true," she said.
"It affects a lot of people. It affects girls, it affects young boys, it affects people after they are teenagers, and a lot of people do die from it, but a lot of people seem to flip it off and think they will get over it.
"I know I copped a lot of flak at school."
Ms McAlister said she has spent most of her teenage years in treatment - including being hospitalized 17 times - the most recent just two weeks ago.
She was critical of servies and treatment avaliable in the ACT and said she knew of many local people who sought treatment in Sydney or Melbourne.
"If you don't have private health insurance in Canberra there is basically nothing, we don't have any appropriate in-patient places for treatment," she said.
"I just spent a month in a hospital where they didn't have any mental health nurses or anything for that.
"For a city that has so many people with eating disorders and so many people at Canberra Hospital with eating disorders all the time, we really don't have the treatment for it.
"We really need more."
The other girls agreed, sharing stories they had heard of sufferers not being able to be admitted to Canberra Hospital due to a shortage of beds for eating disorder patients, people being admitted under different classifications such as having "gastric" or "heart" problems and therefore not recieving appropriate care, recieving what they said was insufficient therapy and support, and a lack of support avaliable for family and friends.
Ms Graham said classifications for treatment in the ACT - based on weight - needed a shake-up.
"They are not taking people on what headspace they are in, they are taking them on their weight requirements and that is not how eating disorders operate," she said.
"Most people I know have been at their sickest when they have been at their heigher weight becuase you are so desperate to get that number down you would do anything."
Ms Graham has lived with bulimia for six years, since she was 12.
She hesitated when asked why she thought she developed the illness before admitting to being bullied at school.
"I wanted to dissapear, I didn't want anyone to pay any attention to me." she said.
Through speaking out she hoped she could raise awareness of the illness in Canberra and encourage sufferers to seek help.
"It wans't until one of my friends, who had previously suffered said 'Noelle you need help, this is not right', that I actually took any notice," she said.
"So maybe by listening to our stories someone might be able to go, 'Maybe I should see a doctor, maybe it doesn't have to be this way.' And if someone doesn't hear you asking for help ask louder, and keep asking until someone listens."
Children 'as young as six want to be thin' - The Expert
By Emily Sherlock
CHILDREN as young as six are developing dangerous dieting behaviors, putting their mental and psychological health at risk, a Canberra academic says.
University of Canberra clinical psychologist Vivienne Lewis said seven-year-olds were presenting with eating disorder-like behaviors while childrne even younger were concerned about their weight and shape.
"The research I've been doing certainly shows that children as young as six are wanting to be thin, are thinking about ways to lose weight and some have even already used dieting practices.
"While you may not necessarily see eating disorders in those younger ages you certainly see the start of such behavior.
"Typically people who present for treatment tend to be adolescents, those around 12 or 13. But having said that, we do get cases of children as young as seven presenting with an eating disorder."
De Lewis said more young children seemed to be seeking treatment for eating disorders in Australia, but if was difficult to determine if this was becuase more were seeking help or becuase eating disorders at younger ages were being better recognised.
She thought peer influence was one reason for dangerous eating behaviors in children, but didn't rule out the incerasing public focus on obesity.
"I think it is partly because when children go to school htey become more aware of their bodies and how they are differnt to other children...because they can see the differences the teasing starts. They are also learning about weight and obesity so very young." she said.
"Children don't live in a vacuum but they hear that stuff [about obesity]. They hear mum and dad talking or older siblings talking about it and about dieting and weight loosing behaviors and they see it on television.
"I think it is alarming that children who have not even hit puberty are already idolising thin body types."
Research she conducted last year in the ACT showed that students aged 9 and 10 were unhappy with their body shape.
"Girls were wanting to look thinner and boys wanted to still have muscles but better figures as well. As adults they also wanted to have a thin build."
ACT Health figures show there were 108 referrals to the ACT Eating Disorders Program in 2006-07, 75 assesments or treatments and 112 phone consultations.
In the same period, 21 patients aged 12-24 were discharged from the Canberra Hospital with eating disorders.
A NSW Health spokeswoman said an estimated 70 to 80 percent of the state's 550 eating disorder patients each year were younger than 16.
AMA calls on Govt to ban underweight models - The Fashion Industry
By Cayla Dengate
AUSTRALIA is one of few countries that doesn't impose weight restrictions on models. Worldwide, governments, fashion designers and events are banning underweight models in a bid to curb copycat eating disorders, yet Australia's catwalks still allow women as small as size 6 and 4 to walk the walk.
Australian Medical Association public health committee chair John Gullotta said, "International, Italy, England, Brazil and Spain have introduced initiatives that are trying to address growing concerns around the promotion of unrealistic ideals. Australia shouldn't be left behind in this."
The bans were sparked by the death of anorexic Brazillian model Ana Carolina Resont followed by model sisters Eliana and Luisel Ramos, who were also anorexic.
Models working for the British Fashion Council now have to present a medical certificate stating they don't have an eating disorder, and must be over 16.
Models in Milan, Rome and Madrid are banned if they have a body mass index of less than 18 - what the United Nations considers to be underweight. And the rules are being enforced - three models were banned at last month's Madrid fashion week and 15 models were banned from Rome fashion week and in June last year.
And it's not just the catwalk. To concide with Milan fashion week last year, photographer Oliveriero Toscani created a series of ads featuring a morbidly anorexic woman in a bid to shock women out of the thin-is-pretty mentality.
A spokesperson from teh fashion coucnil of Australia said Australia didn't have a problem with underweight models or industry pressure for thin models.
Yet ex-model Leda Ross, 22, begs to differ.
"I modelled for about 5 years but I left because I realized I wasn't that type of obsessive person. People would said things like "you're beautiful but your hips are too big o they would pull out a tape measure and tell me to lose weight."
"In the end I decided my bone structure was my bone structure, I can't do anything about it and I don't want to be made to feel guilty and think that I'm fat."
Ms Ross now works in the fashion magazine industry and said when reading magazines the pressure to look good waas still there, but could be avoided.
"Like everywhere, Australian magazines use thin models, but a lot of publications make a real effort to have real-sized beautiful people as well as thin models. I think it's one of those things where you can interpret a fashion shoot in so many ways, it's not simply saying 'be skinny like me.'"
Dr. Gullotta said the Australian Medical Association would welcome the opportunity to meet with government and industry representatives to discuss body image and appropriate guidelines for catwalk models.
Teachers need training to tackle a complex problem - The Schools
By Emily Sherlock
MORE training is urgently needed for teachers dealing with students suffering obesity and body image problems, a Sydney academic has found.
University of Sydney associate professor in the education and social work faculty Jennifer O'Dea said many current approaches were inappropriate and protenially harmful. She had heard stories of teachers weighing students in front of their peers and a high school teacher who started a diet club for overweight girls.
"Teachers need to understand what body image issues are, how they can affect what a child is willing to eat or whether they are willing to participate in sport or PE and how it is linked to general self-esteem," she said.
"In the past, we have found that a lot of teachers - particularly PE teachers - have weighed and measured kids in schools and talked about being overweight as a disease.
"Along with the media and Western Culture we have created this incredible fear of fatness and paranoia about our weight.
"You want teachers to approach the issue as one of physical, social, emotional and psychological mental health - a child's health is so much more than their weight and teachers need to really understand that.
Eating disorder sufferers Noelle Graham, Kathryn Scott and Hannah McAlister said teachers needed training in dealing with issues such as anorexia and bulimia.
"Many teachers don't know what to say or do," Ms McAlilster said. "I had one teacher tell me how great I looked now I had lost weight when I was battling anorexia."
The girls said they had recently approcahed several Canberra schools asking if they could share their stories and experiences with teachers and students byt had been knocked back.
"We were told we couldn't as they didn't want people think there were eating disorders at the school." Ms. Scott said.
"We had a couple of schools say that - it is really intersting because it shows that there is that stigma out there.
"It is putting the name of the school before the welfare of the students and I think that is really dangerous."
ACT Education Minister Andrew Barr said schools recieved many approaches from organizations and individuals who wanted to present their programs in schools.
"Principals and teachers make the decision as to who speaks at the school based on considerations such as whether the topic or speaker fits in with the curriculum or would add to a unit of work being studied by the students at the time." he said.
ACT public schools were committed to providing student support programs.
"The new curruculum for all ACT schools, 'Every Chance to Learn', has a strong emphasis on health as one of its essential learning areas including on the mental health of students to help students learn more about issues such as eating disorders, and how to recgnise them and help themselves or fellow students," he said.
Mr Barr said the department would start a new course for teachers in July, in partnership with Nutrition Australia, "to provide up to date infomration and best practice around nutrition."
Eating disorders program handles hundreds of people - The Services
MORE than 70 people were treated or assessed for eating disorders in the ACT in the last financial year, ACT Health statistics show.
There were also 108 referrals to the eating disorders program and a 112 phone consultations with unregistered clients.
Local sufferers hit out last week at the services avaliable in the ACT, saying more government funding wasa needed for both in and out-patient services and increased counselling and support for sufferers, families and friends.
The ACT has a community-based eating disorders program, which provides a free, public, specialist outpatient program to the ACT and surrounding NSW regions.
It also provides group therapy with an intensive day-treatment program for anorexia nervosa sufferers and individual therapy for those suffering bulimia nervosa and other eating disorders.
In 2006-07, 18 people including two men were admitted to the anorexia day program with an average stay of 11.3 weeks.
In the same period, 37 people were treated for bulimia, buge eating and unspecified eating disorders. Those in the ACT requiring inpatient care through the public health system are admitted to the Canberra Hospital or Calvary Hospital.
The closest specialist eating disorders clinic is in Sydney.
A spokeswoman for ACT Health Minister Katy Gallagher defended the support avaliable.
"The [eating disorders program] offers ongoing individual family support and therapy to clients, families and friends." she said.
"However there is no voluntary support gorup outside of the [program] for those clients suffering an eating disorder and their families."
Emily Sherlock.
As my scanner has passed away recently, I will be typing and taking pictures of the articles, so don't mind the poor-ish quality. Perhaps Kat or Hannah will be kind enough to scan them in.
On the front page of the paper it says:
Too young to diet
By Emily Sherlock (she's really nice, btw)
CHILDREN as young as siz are so frightened of becoming overweight they are adopiting dangerous dieting behavior, a University of Canberra psychologist has warned.
Clinical psychologist, lecturer and researcher Vivienne Lewis said nine and 10-year-old boys and girls in the ACT were also expressing the desire to be thinner and feared becoming fat as adults.
Much of the recent media and social attention on obesity could be fuelling their fears.
"Children don't live in a vacuum but they hear stuff [about obesity]," she said. "They hear mum and dad talking or older siblings talking about it and about dieting and losing weight and they see it on television.
"I think it is alarming that children who have no even hit puberty are already idolising thin body types."
The finding comes as reports of eating disorders in children appear to be escalating, with some children as young as nine seeking professional treatment.
On pages 10-11 the feature contines. The first story is:
Australians Plagued by a Body Image Crisis
Eating Disorder sufferers launch a full-scale campaign to raise awareness of problem
By Emily Sherlock
IF YOU have or have had an eating disorder you can read the same pain, frustration and emptiness in the eyes of others living with it, suffers say.
Noelle Graham, 18, of Yarralumla said, "It is like they have vacated.
"People have always told me they knoew I was in trouble from the minute my eyes clouded over. They were like 'Noelle is not there anymore.'
"And it is true, at my treatment centre if you look at some of the really, really sick clients their eyes are clouded and they are not looking at you clearly, they are not in their head - it is probably becuase at the moment their head is too difficult a place to be."
Two other young women nodded in agreement.
All three have lived with eating disorders for most of their adolescent live sand have banded together to speak out about the illness which claims the lives of hundreds of young women - and men - each year.
They are also frustrated by what they see as the lack of support and treatment services avaliable in the ACT, poor education in the wider community and stigma still attached to the disease.
Hannah McAlilster, 20, of Queanbeyan has battled anorexia for five years, and said judgement from peers and the community was one of the biuggest challenges.
"A lot of people when the found out I had an eating disorder would say things like 'she doesn't really have an eating disorder - she is just doing it for attention' or 'she doens't look like she has an eating disorder' and it wasn't until I lost a significant amount of weight that people actually believed me," she said.
"I just really want people to understand what it is like and understand that it is not something that you choose, you don't decide to get an eating disorder becuase you want the attention, you can't choose it."
Kathryn Scott, 18, of Queanbeyan agrees.
"There is a lot of misunderstanding...Some people think it is a whole bunch of middle-class rich girls in high school who want to be thin and look like tabloid magazines and that is not true," she said.
"It affects a lot of people. It affects girls, it affects young boys, it affects people after they are teenagers, and a lot of people do die from it, but a lot of people seem to flip it off and think they will get over it.
"I know I copped a lot of flak at school."
Ms McAlister said she has spent most of her teenage years in treatment - including being hospitalized 17 times - the most recent just two weeks ago.
She was critical of servies and treatment avaliable in the ACT and said she knew of many local people who sought treatment in Sydney or Melbourne.
"If you don't have private health insurance in Canberra there is basically nothing, we don't have any appropriate in-patient places for treatment," she said.
"I just spent a month in a hospital where they didn't have any mental health nurses or anything for that.
"For a city that has so many people with eating disorders and so many people at Canberra Hospital with eating disorders all the time, we really don't have the treatment for it.
"We really need more."
The other girls agreed, sharing stories they had heard of sufferers not being able to be admitted to Canberra Hospital due to a shortage of beds for eating disorder patients, people being admitted under different classifications such as having "gastric" or "heart" problems and therefore not recieving appropriate care, recieving what they said was insufficient therapy and support, and a lack of support avaliable for family and friends.
Ms Graham said classifications for treatment in the ACT - based on weight - needed a shake-up.
"They are not taking people on what headspace they are in, they are taking them on their weight requirements and that is not how eating disorders operate," she said.
"Most people I know have been at their sickest when they have been at their heigher weight becuase you are so desperate to get that number down you would do anything."
Ms Graham has lived with bulimia for six years, since she was 12.
She hesitated when asked why she thought she developed the illness before admitting to being bullied at school.
"I wanted to dissapear, I didn't want anyone to pay any attention to me." she said.
Through speaking out she hoped she could raise awareness of the illness in Canberra and encourage sufferers to seek help.
"It wans't until one of my friends, who had previously suffered said 'Noelle you need help, this is not right', that I actually took any notice," she said.
"So maybe by listening to our stories someone might be able to go, 'Maybe I should see a doctor, maybe it doesn't have to be this way.' And if someone doesn't hear you asking for help ask louder, and keep asking until someone listens."
Children 'as young as six want to be thin' - The Expert
By Emily Sherlock
CHILDREN as young as six are developing dangerous dieting behaviors, putting their mental and psychological health at risk, a Canberra academic says.
University of Canberra clinical psychologist Vivienne Lewis said seven-year-olds were presenting with eating disorder-like behaviors while childrne even younger were concerned about their weight and shape.
"The research I've been doing certainly shows that children as young as six are wanting to be thin, are thinking about ways to lose weight and some have even already used dieting practices.
"While you may not necessarily see eating disorders in those younger ages you certainly see the start of such behavior.
"Typically people who present for treatment tend to be adolescents, those around 12 or 13. But having said that, we do get cases of children as young as seven presenting with an eating disorder."
De Lewis said more young children seemed to be seeking treatment for eating disorders in Australia, but if was difficult to determine if this was becuase more were seeking help or becuase eating disorders at younger ages were being better recognised.
She thought peer influence was one reason for dangerous eating behaviors in children, but didn't rule out the incerasing public focus on obesity.
"I think it is partly because when children go to school htey become more aware of their bodies and how they are differnt to other children...because they can see the differences the teasing starts. They are also learning about weight and obesity so very young." she said.
"Children don't live in a vacuum but they hear that stuff [about obesity]. They hear mum and dad talking or older siblings talking about it and about dieting and weight loosing behaviors and they see it on television.
"I think it is alarming that children who have not even hit puberty are already idolising thin body types."
Research she conducted last year in the ACT showed that students aged 9 and 10 were unhappy with their body shape.
"Girls were wanting to look thinner and boys wanted to still have muscles but better figures as well. As adults they also wanted to have a thin build."
ACT Health figures show there were 108 referrals to the ACT Eating Disorders Program in 2006-07, 75 assesments or treatments and 112 phone consultations.
In the same period, 21 patients aged 12-24 were discharged from the Canberra Hospital with eating disorders.
A NSW Health spokeswoman said an estimated 70 to 80 percent of the state's 550 eating disorder patients each year were younger than 16.
AMA calls on Govt to ban underweight models - The Fashion Industry
By Cayla Dengate
AUSTRALIA is one of few countries that doesn't impose weight restrictions on models. Worldwide, governments, fashion designers and events are banning underweight models in a bid to curb copycat eating disorders, yet Australia's catwalks still allow women as small as size 6 and 4 to walk the walk.
Australian Medical Association public health committee chair John Gullotta said, "International, Italy, England, Brazil and Spain have introduced initiatives that are trying to address growing concerns around the promotion of unrealistic ideals. Australia shouldn't be left behind in this."
The bans were sparked by the death of anorexic Brazillian model Ana Carolina Resont followed by model sisters Eliana and Luisel Ramos, who were also anorexic.
Models working for the British Fashion Council now have to present a medical certificate stating they don't have an eating disorder, and must be over 16.
Models in Milan, Rome and Madrid are banned if they have a body mass index of less than 18 - what the United Nations considers to be underweight. And the rules are being enforced - three models were banned at last month's Madrid fashion week and 15 models were banned from Rome fashion week and in June last year.
And it's not just the catwalk. To concide with Milan fashion week last year, photographer Oliveriero Toscani created a series of ads featuring a morbidly anorexic woman in a bid to shock women out of the thin-is-pretty mentality.
A spokesperson from teh fashion coucnil of Australia said Australia didn't have a problem with underweight models or industry pressure for thin models.
Yet ex-model Leda Ross, 22, begs to differ.
"I modelled for about 5 years but I left because I realized I wasn't that type of obsessive person. People would said things like "you're beautiful but your hips are too big o they would pull out a tape measure and tell me to lose weight."
"In the end I decided my bone structure was my bone structure, I can't do anything about it and I don't want to be made to feel guilty and think that I'm fat."
Ms Ross now works in the fashion magazine industry and said when reading magazines the pressure to look good waas still there, but could be avoided.
"Like everywhere, Australian magazines use thin models, but a lot of publications make a real effort to have real-sized beautiful people as well as thin models. I think it's one of those things where you can interpret a fashion shoot in so many ways, it's not simply saying 'be skinny like me.'"
Dr. Gullotta said the Australian Medical Association would welcome the opportunity to meet with government and industry representatives to discuss body image and appropriate guidelines for catwalk models.
Teachers need training to tackle a complex problem - The Schools
By Emily Sherlock
MORE training is urgently needed for teachers dealing with students suffering obesity and body image problems, a Sydney academic has found.
University of Sydney associate professor in the education and social work faculty Jennifer O'Dea said many current approaches were inappropriate and protenially harmful. She had heard stories of teachers weighing students in front of their peers and a high school teacher who started a diet club for overweight girls.
"Teachers need to understand what body image issues are, how they can affect what a child is willing to eat or whether they are willing to participate in sport or PE and how it is linked to general self-esteem," she said.
"In the past, we have found that a lot of teachers - particularly PE teachers - have weighed and measured kids in schools and talked about being overweight as a disease.
"Along with the media and Western Culture we have created this incredible fear of fatness and paranoia about our weight.
"You want teachers to approach the issue as one of physical, social, emotional and psychological mental health - a child's health is so much more than their weight and teachers need to really understand that.
Eating disorder sufferers Noelle Graham, Kathryn Scott and Hannah McAlister said teachers needed training in dealing with issues such as anorexia and bulimia.
"Many teachers don't know what to say or do," Ms McAlilster said. "I had one teacher tell me how great I looked now I had lost weight when I was battling anorexia."
The girls said they had recently approcahed several Canberra schools asking if they could share their stories and experiences with teachers and students byt had been knocked back.
"We were told we couldn't as they didn't want people think there were eating disorders at the school." Ms. Scott said.
"We had a couple of schools say that - it is really intersting because it shows that there is that stigma out there.
"It is putting the name of the school before the welfare of the students and I think that is really dangerous."
ACT Education Minister Andrew Barr said schools recieved many approaches from organizations and individuals who wanted to present their programs in schools.
"Principals and teachers make the decision as to who speaks at the school based on considerations such as whether the topic or speaker fits in with the curriculum or would add to a unit of work being studied by the students at the time." he said.
ACT public schools were committed to providing student support programs.
"The new curruculum for all ACT schools, 'Every Chance to Learn', has a strong emphasis on health as one of its essential learning areas including on the mental health of students to help students learn more about issues such as eating disorders, and how to recgnise them and help themselves or fellow students," he said.
Mr Barr said the department would start a new course for teachers in July, in partnership with Nutrition Australia, "to provide up to date infomration and best practice around nutrition."
Eating disorders program handles hundreds of people - The Services
MORE than 70 people were treated or assessed for eating disorders in the ACT in the last financial year, ACT Health statistics show.
There were also 108 referrals to the eating disorders program and a 112 phone consultations with unregistered clients.
Local sufferers hit out last week at the services avaliable in the ACT, saying more government funding wasa needed for both in and out-patient services and increased counselling and support for sufferers, families and friends.
The ACT has a community-based eating disorders program, which provides a free, public, specialist outpatient program to the ACT and surrounding NSW regions.
It also provides group therapy with an intensive day-treatment program for anorexia nervosa sufferers and individual therapy for those suffering bulimia nervosa and other eating disorders.
In 2006-07, 18 people including two men were admitted to the anorexia day program with an average stay of 11.3 weeks.
In the same period, 37 people were treated for bulimia, buge eating and unspecified eating disorders. Those in the ACT requiring inpatient care through the public health system are admitted to the Canberra Hospital or Calvary Hospital.
The closest specialist eating disorders clinic is in Sydney.
A spokeswoman for ACT Health Minister Katy Gallagher defended the support avaliable.
"The [eating disorders program] offers ongoing individual family support and therapy to clients, families and friends." she said.
"However there is no voluntary support gorup outside of the [program] for those clients suffering an eating disorder and their families."
Emily Sherlock.
Friday, April 4, 2008
Youth Week 2008 Yay!
Yay! Youth Week went really well.
Katy and Noelle did an awesome job because by the time I got there all the scales had been painted already!
We got lots of positive feedback and heaps of people participated. I'm half asleep as I'm typing this so instead of risking typing something stupid in my semi-delusional state, I'll post some photos instead.





(this is Noelle and myself)
Thanks everyone!
<3 Hannah
Katy and Noelle did an awesome job because by the time I got there all the scales had been painted already!
We got lots of positive feedback and heaps of people participated. I'm half asleep as I'm typing this so instead of risking typing something stupid in my semi-delusional state, I'll post some photos instead.





(this is Noelle and myself)
Thanks everyone!
<3 Hannah
National Youth Week Expo
Hey Guys!

These are three examples of the scales that were painted today (the bottom one, with the foot prints is my scale). It was a really amazing night. We had such a great chat to the Navigate people, as well as Cyclops. We also met Ben from Carers ACT, which was good to meet him in the flesh and we're really hoping to get this family/friends support group up and running really soon :)



I'm getting really tired now (even though it is early) and thinking is very....very...challenging! So, I'm sure Katy and Hannah will update sometime on the weekend, with many more cool pictures!
Peace out,
Noelle xoxo.
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