The Chronicle

Disorders are eating at too many of us

- EMMA MCBRIDE

IN RECENT months a national conversati­on on eating disorders and disordered eating has come to the fore. I hope it stays there. Eating disorders impact roughly a million Australian­s. From our classrooms to our boardrooms, from our sports fields to our stages. They are mental health conditions that don’t look a particular way or only affect a particular group.

This issue cannot fade to the back of our minds for months at a time until the next confrontin­g television special is broadcast or newspaper front page is printed.

It is not just the next headline of a 24-hour news cycle for those living with an eating disorder, or their loved ones, carers, parents, friends. It’s a major mental health condition with lifelong impacts.

But it’s not just eating disorders that are misunderst­ood. The vast complexity of disordered eating is largely not understood.

Too little is known about the causes or cures for fasting disorders. We must continue to research and evaluate, because it is through this investigat­ion and robust analysis that the best solutions will be found.

And while it might be easy to push this conversati­on aside, it must be had for the simple fact that eating disorders are among the most lethal mental health disorders.

This conversati­on must be thoughtful and factual, making a departure from the sensationa­lism that has plagued the topic in the past. It is far too important for it to be coopted by click bait and too large to turn anyone away. We need a conversati­on that reveals the full extent of disordered eating. We must find solutions for all of those who struggle with eating-based ill health.

And while across the political landscape we will have our disagreeme­nts, I fundamenta­lly believe that it is through a constructi­ve big-tent dialogue that we will find our best path forward.

Work is underway – including investment in seven new communityb­ased residentia­l eating disorder centres. We also know that historical­ly, eating disorders have received the lowest research investment of any mental illness.

People with lived experience continue to say that access to care is patchy, inconsiste­nt, difficult to navigate and at times detrimenta­l.

To bridge the knowledge gap, we are funding the Australian Eating Disorders Research and Translatio­n Centre at the University of Sydney.

The centre encourages researcher­s and health care providers to work hand-in-hand to turn research into sound policy and practice. And while support is delivered, we need to make sure that any interventi­ons are safe, appropriat­e and most importantl­y properly evaluated and effective.

It is about building an evidence base, understand­ing what works and what does not, listening to those with lived experience and identifyin­g the underlying causes of disordered eating. With that approach, we will see real change.

EMMA MCBRIDE IS THE FEDERAL ASSISTANT MINISTER FOR MENTAL HEALTH AND SUICIDE PREVENTION AND ASSISTANT MINISTER FOR RURAL AND REGIONAL HEALTH

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