New Eating Disorders Resource Labelled ‘Game Changer’ By GP
Teachers, and those with student welfare responsibility, may at last have a new resource to help them support young people experiencing eating disorders. Such is the case of rapidly increasing rates in disordered eating across the country, it is now becoming more and more challenging for headteachers, school wellbeing teams and campus-based care staff to find swift and appropriate options for support. Now a new service has entered the arena, to help provide instant empathy and recognition of an individual’s mental health challenge, and the resource has already been labelled a ‘potential game changer’ by one experienced GP. Wednesday’s Child launched in Mental Health Awareness Week, to offer carefully curated wellbeing gift boxes for eating disorders patients – and those with mental health issues – which can be ordered or provided in a welfare setting during a one-to-one. The social enterprise, which ploughs its profits back into the delivery of support for those recovering from or experiencing an eating disorder, has been devised by a woman seeking her own continued recovery from a 20 year battle with anorexia. Debbie Watson, 41, says the boxes are just a doorway into a community of other services, events, training and coaching activities which are very specifically designed to acknowledge the troubling world of eating disorders. It is estimated that in the UK alone, some 1.25 million contend with an eating disorder such as bulimia or anorexia, but that many more have become immersed in a distressing cycle of disordered eating and mental health struggles, in particular since the advent of social media. Anorexia nervosa has the highest morbidity rate of any mental health illness, with death likely through suicide, or cardiac failure. As well as being available directly to schools and university campus teams, the curated Wednesday’s Child boxes can be ordered on a subscription basis, or as a one-off gift, and have been carefully considered to provide contents which aim to encourage mindfulness, self-soothing, nourishment, and comfort. It is believed to be the first time that a box with such curated contents, and to this particular tailored audience, has been available. A longer term mission for the social enterprise aims to achieve a designated daycare and educational centre to support both individuals with eating disorders, and those wishing to gain more awareness. “When you know someone with a mental health issue like anorexia nervosa, it’s natural that you might want to be able to show you care – but I’ve seen for myself how anxious friends and family become about what is ‘appropriate’ by way of a kindness gesture,” said Debbie. “Wednesday’s Child’s boxes aren’t about an automatic fix, but they’re about showing empathy, and reminding an individual of their worth. “I truly believe, from personal experience, that eating disorders require the ‘it takes a village’ approach, whereby there’s multiple people and functions helping one person to recover. The current system needs more. It has to change. “Time and again we hear that mental health services are under strain, beds are in short supply, and that specialist care staff are fewer in number. It becomes imperative that everyone who cares, can, if they so choose, play a role in the support of another.” As well as delivering the tailored boxes, Wednesday’s Child has also launched with a number of other unique services to help those dealing with an eating disorder. It stages Supportive Suppers, Accompanied Shopping, Awareness Certification (for individuals and corporates), Recovery Coaching, and a Jobs and Skills Portal, aimed at allowing those with a mental health condition to access projects and opportunities which potentially need less formal workplace structures. Debbie, who first experienced the onset of anorexia nervosa during university, says Wednesday’s Child has great potential in working in conjunction with what schools, colleges and universities are already doing to assist students at times of struggle. “We’re very keen to see student welfare and teaching staff access the boxes and signpost to our events,” she explained. “It’s very common for a person experiencing anorexia, bulimia, or another disordered eating condition, to be told that even at a very low BMI, they may have to wait some 10 weeks for something like cognitive behavioural therapy – and longer still for a bed. “That makes it terribly distressing for all concerned, because often waiting lists are too long and services are too stretched. “Just the provision of a box encourages that person to enter into the Wednesday’s Child community and its Supportive Suppers and other opportunities. It’s a small way of starting to reverse the decline in a person’s wellbeing and state of social isolation.” She is also keen to hear from businesses, and in particular, those with HR responsibility, who may wish to send a sensitively curated box to an employee contending with stress, mental health issues, or a period of personal struggle. “Whilst our boxes have been born out of my experience with an eating disorder, and a real understanding of that aspect of mental health, they are not solely for those with that illness or journey,” she adds. “The way they have been curated – without mention of eating disorders inside – means they are just as appropriate for someone taking time out with stress, depression, bereavement, or needing a gift which is more ‘considered’ at a time when a pick-up is really needed. “I would welcome the chance to talk to businesses who would regularly like us to create wellbeing boxes for their staff and clients.” The boxes and services being offered by Wednesday’s Child have already received positive approval from those experienced in primary care and GP practice. Dr Lucy Henshall FRCGP, a Suffolk-based GP, said: “In my 25 plus years of work as a frontline GP, I always felt there was so little to offer to my patients with emerging eating disorders, or to those still on the recovery journey. “Wednesday’s Child sends ‘kindness in a box’, but it also provides a whole range of other initiatives, all within a supportive framework and community.” She