Eating Disorder

More from Eating Disorder

Beautiful happy family having fun cooking lunch together, sitting at kitchen counter and enjoying leisure time at home

The Link Between Parental Dieting and Disordered Eating Behaviours

Parenting – and parents’ own relationships with food and their bodies – can have a big impact on how young people feel about themselves and their bodies. Some parental behaviours can encourage body positivity and positive relationships with food, while others may make the development of disordered eating behaviours more likely.

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Teenagers having fun on a picnic in the park on lawn

The Dangers of ‘Clean Eating’ and Food Rules in Tweens and Teens

Many young people now take part in ‘clean eating’, a type of diet that involves eating foods considered to be healthy, unprocessed, or without certain ingredients like added sugar or saturated fats. Clean eating is often framed as a health pursuit – a way of eating that is good for the body and mental health. 

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Teenage girl eating apple in field

Choosing Eating Disorder Treatment: A Parents’ Guide

Eating disorders are serious conditions that cause harm to the mental, physical, and social lives of young people. There’s no such thing as a “mild” eating disorder and some types of eating disorders can be fatal if left untreated. This means that understanding how to choose good treatment is really important. 

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autism and anxiety

Are Eating Disorders More Common Among Autistic Young People?

Eating disorders are one type of mental health disorder that seem to affect autistic young people more than other people. Young autistic people may show different disordered eating behaviours, such as using food to cope with emotions or placing a lot of their self-value on body shape or weight.

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Sad teenage boy sitting alone at high school hallway

Repeating a Year at School Following a Mental Health Crisis: Putting Mental Health First

When a young person experiences a mental health crisis, they may have to take a substantial amount of time out of school. This can happen because their mental health symptoms make it too difficult to navigate their school environment or because their school cannot provide the support they need to stay safe while they are there. They may also take a break from school to focus on their recovery with intensive outpatient or residential treatment.

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focused shot of family holding hands together, concept of family and relationships

Parental Separation and Divorce: A Trauma-Informed Approach

When parents separate or divorce, it shakes the family system. Families often begin a grieving process, experiencing changing emotions like shock, sadness, or anger. Separation itself – and the events leading up to it – can sometimes be traumatic for family members, including both parents and children.

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Group of multiethnic young friends walking through the city laughing holding each other

Are Difficulties in Teen Friendships Associated with Worsening Mental Health?

Unsurprisingly, adolescent friendships are linked to mental health. Young people with at least one friendship have higher self-worth and less depression. Those with high-quality friendships or more friends are less likely to experience emotional distress or social difficulties. Even a small number of high-quality friendships can also act as a buffer against wider social difficulties like a lack of acceptance from peers.

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