Allow me to introduce myself my name is Edwin Fuller Torrey and I am a trained psychiatrist and schizophrenia researcher; I help treat individuals with their psychological disorders. My treatment option for someone with an eating disorder is to first conduct psychotherapies to see what type of eating disorder my client is experiencing. Depending on the severity of my clients symptoms I would then suggest prescribing medications and managing drug therapy. Unfortunately, based on my experience medications cannot cure eating disorders. However, medications may help control urges to binge or purge or to manage excessive preoccupations with food and diet. In some cases, I have prescribed antidepressants and anti-anxiety medications to my clients
According to National Institute of Mental Health "Treatment plans are tailored to each individual and may include one of the following: Psychotherapy, medical care and monitoring, nutritional counseling, and medications. Also some patients may need to be hospitalized if they a severely malnourished." Eating disorders are nothing to mess with and should be dealt with caution, care and compassion.
Treatments of eating disorders vary in approach. Individual, group, and/or family psychotherapy, medical care and monitoring, nutritional counseling, medications, acceptance and commitment therapy, anti-depressants,
Nearly 7 in 10 Americans use prescribed drugs, for several reasons, everyday. Prescription drugs have become a huge problem to America's health care system due to their exponentially rising price - so America must ask ourselves why prescribed drugs are so expensive, how these prices affect us, and how we can fix these dangerously high prices.
If I was interested in learning more about eating disorders in order to better help a client, I would utilize reliable sources on the Internet as well as “reading books, professional journals, government documents and publications, encyclopedias, monographs, published by private agencies and organizations....” (Reamer, 2006, p. 195). It would also be beneficial to look up and see if there would be any continuing education sessions that are about eating disorders. Contacting other professionals who have experience working with eating disorders would also be beneficial. These individuals might be social workers and they might even be doctors. Looking up evidence based practice for eating disorders would be
The intended use of medications is meant to improve a person’ health, it is very important the individual administering medication or self-medicating use the drugs correctly, by following the doctors’ instruction for the medication prescribed. Medication is given to diagnose, treat, and prevent illness. Medication can be very dangerous, which can potentially cause harm or even deaf if it’s not used properly.
Therapy is often used. And oftentimes patients are submitted into a psychiatric ward for people suffering with eating disorders.
Even though people need their prescriptions, the abuse of them is getting out of control and we need to find a way to regulate it better,because it can destroy a family, cause some to become addicted, or even kill them. Prescription drugs are no joke, they can be worse than illegal drugs like marijuana, cocaine, and even heroin. The only difference is a doctor can prescribe these types of drugs. The problem we run into with prescription drugs is there is not enough being done to keep the person from becoming addicted or them selling to others. In 2007 2.5 million Americans abused just painkillers (Drug free world). That is not even including the other two types. Now it is starting to affect teens, one out of every ten teenagers admit to abusing a prescribed drug(Drug-free world).
In the United States of America, there is prescription drug abuse epidemic that continues to be a growing concern. Prescription drugs cause a large amount of overdoses and result in an abundant amount of deaths each year. A government study conducted shows this epidemic is scarily on the rise, “A recent government study found a 400% increase in prescription drug abuse between 1998 and 2008” (Schreiner 531). The excessive use of prescription drug abuse is leading to nonmedical use of the drugs, and creating addiction. Furthermore society is paying an extreme amount of money in this battle. With this drug abuse on the rise, legislators must create a law preventing doctors and pharmacists from over prescribing prescription medications as well a law to require they both participate in drug monitoring programs to prevent drug abuse. Now is the time that doctors and the pharmaceutical industry must be held accountable for their role in causing one of America’s worst addictions. The over medication of prescription drugs in the United States must be brought to an end by legislators creating laws to stop
Eating disorders are severe disturbances in eating behaviors, such as eating too little or eating too much. “Anorexia nervosa affects nearly one in 200 Americans in their lives (three-quarters of them female)” (Treating anorexia nervosa). Anorexia, when translated into Greek means “without appetite” which is not true for all suffering from anorexia most people with this disorder have not lost their appetite they simply have to ignore it. People with anorexia have an intense fear of gaining weight and have convinced themselves that they are overweight even if they are the opposite of overweight. Since the way that they view themselves is in a negative light they starve themselves and put their lives at risk. “In the most severe
Most people are addicted to something, somewhere. The type of addiction usually missed by people is the one related to prescription drugs. The main question here is why and how do people get addicted to these medicines. Stress, personal problems and lack of knowledge are the main reasons for getting addicted. Doctors and pharmacists play a major role in responsibilities toward this issue. Ensuring physician awareness and providing patient education could lessen prescription medication addiction.
To treat an eating disorder and recovering from one can take a long time. To treat a disorder usually involves monitoring a individuals physical health and helping them deal with psychological problem. It is important for friends and family to be there for the individual and help them believe they can get better with time and support from the loved ones. Examples of treatment could be cognitive behaviour therapy also known as CBT, another method is interpersonal psychotherapy, dietary counselling and also medication.
The effectiveness of the treatment and type of treatment given to each person varies due to individual differences between everyone meaning no sufferer is the same therefore might require a different method of treatment than another sufferer, this means that the developed treatment must provide the person with holistic care. The effectiveness of the treatment also depends on recovery which can be a slow and long process, taking up to 10 years or longer as changes the negative illusions of the sufferer can be a very challenging task. The recovery process must include restoration of an average healthy weight, varied and balanced consumption of meals in regularity, reducing or stopping irrational fears about food and body image, understanding one’s own distorted views and behaviours leading to set realistic goals for oneself. (The Something Fishy Website on Eating Disorders, No
There are a few ways to try and treat this disorder. Because it is a mental disorder the first approach a lot of parents take with their child is to get them into some sort of counseling. A counselor can talk to the child or adult suffering from this disease and see if they can try to talk to them and get through to them. They might be able to figure it is deeply rooted from something in their past. They have to try to talk the sick person into trying to want to eat a healthy amount of food and love his or her body again. There are some drugs that can be prescribed to try and help with this which include “Olanzapine (Zyprexa), Citalopram (Celexa), Fluoxetine (Prozac)” ("Overview - Anorexia nervosa - Mayo Clinic", 2016). If a person is refusing help and is getting to a dangerously low weight, they can be hospitalized and force fed from a feeding tube. I did watch a show from the UK that had a program for girls with eating disorders. They were sent away from their parents to live in a home with other girls with eating disorders and were monitored very closely. They were required to eat a certain amount of calories per day and watched extremely closely. They were not allowed to use the restroom until three hours after finishing a meal in fear that they might be hiding food in their mouths and spit it out or some girls would make themselves throw up what they had just eaten. Exercise was limited and any type
Over the past decades, medicine and prescription drugs have made a huge beneficial impact on the health of individuals. Chicken pox, malaria, measles, polio, tetanus, yellow fever, and smallpox were all considered life threatening diseases until medical researchers came along and created vaccines and other drug treatments that have or almost eradicated these diseases. Without the use of drug therapy, the population would be a lot smaller and the life expectancy of people would be much shorter. Individuals are able to live more at peace, knowing that most illnesses can be cured or treated by simply getting a prescription from a doctor or receiving some other type of therapy related to drugs. Undoubtedly, drug therapy has helped the United States evolve and worry about other issues. It has saved an abundance of lives and will continue to progress over the next generations. Medical breakthroughs appear to happen quite commonly now, and that clearly means something for the effects of drugs.
Based on driving factors of the opioid epidemic identified earlier in this brief, resources provided by the ACA and the key provisions of CARA, SATTC makes the below broad policy recommendations to the state of Alabama. SATTC’s goal is to make recommendations that are broad enough to allow for tailoring based on Alabama’s current initiatives and unique needs, shifts in the federal response, and changes in trends over time, yet specific enough to serve as an outline for where to begin.