By Catherine Pearson, The Huffington Post
08.02.11
It took Matt Wetsel, 26, more than a month to work up the courage to
try group therapy for anorexia, the eating disorder he says consumed two
years of his life. A college student at the time, Matt said he would
plan to attend a meeting, become overwhelmed and would shy away.
When Wetsel finally steeled himself enough to attend, a woman stopped
him and asked if he needed help.
Unable to explain himself, he handed
her a flier promoting the group. The woman disappeared, returning a few
minutes later with the news that he could not take part. The group, it
seemed, was for women only.
"I have never felt so defeated," Wetsel said in a speech on Capitol Hill last spring.
Eating disorders have long been believed to be a female issue. The
National Institute of Health estimates that girls are two-and-a-half
times more likely to have an eating disorder than boys, while groups
like the nonprofit National Association of Anorexia Nervosa and
Associated Disorders state that women are "much more likely than men to
develop an eating disorder." Yet a growing body of evidence suggests
that such numbers and statements may not truly reflect the large number
of boys and men with eating disorders -- be it anorexia, bulimia, binge
eating or the broader category of "eating disorders not otherwise
specified."
Earlier this month, the BBC reported
that hospital admissions for men with eating disorders increased by 66
percent in the last decade in the U.K. In the U.S., a recent study in
the Archives of General Psychiatry
found that binge eating and bulimia were indeed more prevalent among
adolescent girls than boys, but that the prevalence of anorexia nervosa
was exactly the same.
"The one million dollar question is what this means," said Daniel Le
Grange, Ph.D, director of the eating disorders program at The University
of Chicago and an author of that study.
"We don't know what happens to them, we don't know if [the
prevalence] has changed or increased," he continued. "We don't know if
the fact that we tend see more girls in a clinical realm means that boys
tend to recover more readily on their own; we don't know why they don't
come in for treatment more. We don't know."
Sam Thomas, founder of the U.K.-based charity Men Get Eating Disorders Too,
echoed the sentiment, saying that the recent findings raise questions
about whether eating disorders are up in earnest or if more
practitioners are simply recognizing the symptoms.
"We suspect that these new findings are only the tip of the iceberg,
as we know that there is still a large majority of male sufferers who
struggle to get the help they need, due to the stigma and stereotypical
gender assumptions still made about eating disorders," Thomas told The
Huffington Post.
For his part, Wetsel -- who has been in recovery for more than five
years and has become an eating disorder activist, running the blog ...Until Eating Disorders Are No More
-- has written that his recovery mandated he fit himself into a
"culture mostly designed, tailored and intended for females." Many of
the books he read referenced women only, using the pronoun "she."
Wetsel said he developed a thick skin about such gender issues, but
imagines that other men struggle as well, particularly in light of the
consternation he faced when telling people about his disorder.
"I want to say, 'Well, what should a recovered anorexic look like?
Should I be female? Should I be emaciated?'" he said. "If you saw me
around town I'd probably be wearing a band shirt and some shorts cut off
at the knee. You'd probably see a few tattoos. I guess no one's
expecting someone by that description to have a story about being
anorexic."
Which could be a reason why men are less likely to seek treatment:
The people around them, including their practitioners, may not recognize
the symptoms and encourage them to get help.
"It often doesn't cross parents' or doctors' minds, because the
public is so schooled to think that eating disorders are a female thing
only," said Le Grange of the University of Chicago. He estimates that
generally, for every 10 cases they see in his program, one or two is a
boy. Last week, however, he saw four cases alone.
What is needed next, according to Le Grange, are further studies
looking at the prevalence and impact of eating disorders in boys and men
to better understand any differences in treatment strategies, as well
as to assess what happens to boys with eating disorders in the long
term.
In the meantime, people like Wetsel -- who was eventually welcomed
into the group meetings at his university and said they were integral to
his recovery -- are speaking up.
"This is serious stuff. There isn't any room for people to treat
eating disorders as anything less than a life-threatening illness," he
said. "It's bad enough and hard enough for women to get help and be
taken seriously, and men have to deal with an additional layer of stigma
that supposedly challenges the way people see their masculinity and
sexuality."

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