Vetlife - Information and Support for Veterinary Professionals
AboutContactLinksDonationsLegalSite Map
Out of Hours & Crisis SupportStress, Depression & SuicideEmployment IssuesAddictive & Eating DisordersAlcoholDrug AddictionEating DisordersGamblingOther Mental Health ProblemsFamily SupportRelationshipsLegal & RCVS ComplaintsIllness & DisabilityIsolation & LonelinessFinancial ProblemsSupport for Recent GraduatesStudent FinanceVeterinary Support CharitiesIrish Support Services
Eating Disorders

Two veterinary surgeons have kindly agreed to share their personal experiences of eating disorders and the steps they have taken to recover in the hope that it will encourage others to seek help:

Download a vet's personal account of dealing with anorexia
Download a vet's peronal account of dealing with bulimia

The university vet schools currently estimate that 10% of their pupils are suffering from eating disorders and that the illness has usually started before they come to university. Statistics for the veterinary profession are not available but in the general population beat (formerly the Eating Disorders Association) calculate that the combined total for people diagnosed and undiagnosed with an eating disorder in the UK is 1.15 million.

12 questions that may help you decide if you have a problem:

  1. Do your friends and family tell you that you are too thin?
  2. Are you extremely anxious about gaining any weight?
  3. Do you look at yourself in the mirror and see an overweight person even though weight charts say that your weight is average or below average?
  4. Does your self-esteem depend on what you weigh?
  5. Do you vomit in order to purge yourself of food or use exercise?
  6. If you are a woman, have you stopped having periods?
  7. Do you use laxatives, diuretics or enemas to lose weight?
  8. Do you lose control of your eating by binging a couple of times a week?
  9. Do you have health issues related to food such as worn dental enamel, hair loss, hypoglycaemia or osteoporosis?
  10. Are you afraid of losing total control of your weight and eating?
  11. Are your eating habits a cause for concern to others?
  12. Is the quality of your life dramatically affected by your relationship to food?

(Source: lifeworkscommunity.com)


Getting Help

Site designed by Ludwood Interactive