Times-Call (Longmont)

Lawmakers want to regulate treatment

- By Seth Klamann sklamann@denverpost.com

Two weeks after a routine trip to a health clinic turned into a psychiatri­c hospitaliz­ation, Emma Troughton was on a plane to Denver.

The interventi­on had been building: By early 2017, Troughton had struggled with body image and eating for years, first as a high schooler in Indiana piecing through their gender identity and then as a college student in California processing personal trauma. School-issued laptops sent Troughton down social media rabbit holes of unhealthy weight loss strategies. A password-protected blog became a repository for body measuremen­ts and bad informatio­n.

Troughton crashed their car because of the brain fog and cognitive decline caused by their malnourish­ment. Providers at a campus health clinic were so alarmed they wouldn’t allow Troughton to return to class. After two weeks in a psychiatri­c unit, Troughton left for Denver. The city, they had learned, was a national hub for eating disorder treatment.

“I felt this existentia­l detachment from my body,” said Troughton, who now works for Mental Health Colorado. “Any attempt I had at re-integratin­g (with my body), I felt flooded with anger and a sense of helplessne­ss. I reacquaint­ed strongly with my eating disorder going into college.”

Troughton spent the next three years in and out of Denver facilities, navigating treatment they considered to be both traumatic and life-saving. The city is home to Denver Health’s ACUTE, considered one of the highest-level eating disorder facilities in the country. The Eating Recovery Center, a national for-profit treatment provider, is based here, too. That’s where Troughton was treated, and their last time there — in 2020 — came as COVID-19 arrived in Colorado.

The pandemic would ignite a series of societal disruption­s that

have led to an explosion of eating disorder diagnoses among youth in Colorado and across the United States. Providers here say demands for their services have increased and that the pandemic’s impact on eating disorders will endure for years.

“The severity of kids that we saw during the worst part of the pandemic was really intense,” said Jennifer Hagman, the director of the disorder eating program at Children’s Hospital Colorado. “Almost every kid, to a person, talked about the impact of being isolated at home and being on social media and starting to get even more body focused than they already were.”

The surge in cases — coupled with concerns about treatment raised by patients like Troughton — have gained the attention of Colorado lawmakers and mental health advocates. A leading Democrat in the state Senate has introduced legislatio­n in recent weeks that seeks both to prevent eating disorders from developing and to regulate the treatment that’s provided when that prevention fails. The two bills — one to establish a statewide office of disordered eating prevention, the other to limit the availabili­ty of diet pills and to better oversee medical practices — are unique in the country, several local and national experts told the Denver Post. Their introducti­on, those experts said, signal an increased focus on a long-neglected and stigmatize­d disease that is among the deadliest mental illnesses.

The diseases — like anorexia and bulimia — are often portrayed as physical diseases affecting teen girls and models. While women and LGBT people are more commonly affected, men and boys are vulnerable, too, and often go undiagnose­d. Six former patients who spoke to the Denver Post described their condition as psychologi­cally torturous and all-consuming, often born of a desire for control, a response to trauma or a trigger point around weight or healthy eating. Hagman said the diseases can be enduring and as severe as schizophre­nia, and they often develop handin-hand with anxiety and depression.

“It’s like being held hostage,” said Sarah Staron, who struggled with an eating disorder for a decade. She’s now the policy coordinato­r for the advocacy group Young Invincible­s, which is supporting the legislatio­n. “By yourself, by society or by the plate of food that’s in front of you.”

Several former eating disorder patients who spoke to the Post for this story said they had attempted suicide. Many said the disease was like having a voice in their head, forever focused on food, dominating their first and final thoughts each day.

After the pandemic began, first-time attendance at the Denver-based Eating Disorder Foundation’s family support groups spiked more a 1,000%, the foundation’s program director said. ACUTE, the Denver Health clinic, saw its patient load jump 32% between 2019 and 2021. The Colorado Department

of Public Health and Environmen­t does not collect data on the prevalence of the diseases here, but a Harvard analysis suggested that 9% of the state — roughly 501,000 residents — will develop an eating disorder in their lifetimes.

Through these two bills, lawmakers and advocates say they want to curtail eating disorders here, working in schools and establishi­ng preventati­ve practices, like banning diet pills and educating adults to identify the diseases early. Beyond that, they want to ensure that treatment facilities are operating under set standards governing patient care and dignity, something several patients said is lacking in the current system. Both bills are set for their first committee hearing in late March.

“It’s quite novel what we’re attempting to accomplish here,” said Sen. Dominick Moreno, a Commerce City Democrat and the sponsor of the two eating disorder bills. “It’s novel because eating disorder issues don’t get a whole lot of attention. It’s the first time in as long as

I’ve been at the Capitol that eating disorders have really taken the spotlight.”

That spotlight, Moreno said, is thanks to people like Aimee Resnick.

Resnick helped draft the legislatio­n as a member of the Colorado Youth Advisory Council. She remembered learning about calorie counting, weight loss and the ideal body-mass index in her high school health class. Her eating disorder developed from there, she said. Then the pandemic washed over Colorado, and her health spiraled.

“Part of why we saw such a big spike in symptoms of disordered eating over the pandemic is it felt like the world was out of control for everyone,” said Resnick, who’s now a student at Northweste­rn University in Illinois, “and disordered eating offers that sense of control for everyone.”

Dr. Guido Frank, a psychiatry professor and eating disorder researcher at the University of California San Diego, said the control offered by eating disorders is an illusion. It can give patients — who, Frank said, are often high-achievers, perfection­ists and athletes — a sense of autonomy. But quickly the disorder can take over and become self-reinforcin­g.

“Then you have a real problem, right, because you have in your thinking, in your belief system, you finally found something that helps you feel better in a way, and then the next problem starts,” Frank said. “If you change your eating, and you get out of a certain normal range of how your body should be fed, then you change your brain.”

As Resnick’s condition worsened, she feared she would be hospitaliz­ed. She attempted suicide. After an initial hospital stay, she ran into one of the paradoxes of eating disorders: She wasn’t skinny enough to qualify for treatment.

The body-mass index — calculated using a person’s height and weight — was created by a Belgian mathematic­ian in the 19th century, 30 years before the Civil War. It’s now used as a key metric in determinin­g the severity of a patient’s eating disorder and the level of care they should receive. That means that some eating disorder patients who meet all other criteria to receive treatment aren’t admitted — either by the facility or by their insurer — because they haven’t lost enough weight.

“Only 6% of folks with eating disorders are underweigh­t,” said Lydia Rhino, the program director for the Eating Disorder Foundation. “If you think about the scope of the folks that (metric) is missing and leaving out as not receiving care or not having insurance coverage due to their BMI, we’re neglecting to treat a large majority of folks.”

With Resnick’s help, Moreno’s

bills would change that. The regulatory legislatio­n — SB23-176 — would ban the use of BMI in assessing the necessity of treatment for an eating disorder patient. That would be a first nationally, experts and providers said, and it reflects the reality that eating disorders extend beyond a person’s size.

Anne Marie O’melia, the chief medical and clinical officer for Eating Recovery Center, was more hesitant to endorse the BMI change. She understood the intent but noted that profession­al guidance for eating disorder treatment included the use of BMI. If state law prohibited its use, she said, then providers would have to choose between statute and clinical standards.

Moreno said he didn’t want weight to dictate who gets care. That decision should be collaborat­ive between patient and providers and ultimately based on total need, he said.

The two bills would also set up a statewide prevention office to coordinate research, best practices and education. The legislatio­n would also ban the sale of diet pills, which Dr. Bryn Austin, a researcher and professor at Harvard and Boston Children’s Hospital, said was a pervasive problem among youth in particular. She compared the regulatory environmen­t overseeing the pills and the industry pumping them out to the “Wild West,” she said. Meanwhile, Austin said, 10% of Latina girls and 6% of white girls have used weight-loss pills in the past month, quoting data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

“These are commercial industries that profit from eating disorders and profit from promoting poor body image,” she said. “They profit from making consumers feel bad about their bodies.”

Though there has been some concern from grocers about the extent of the supplement­al regulation, Moreno’s proposals around prevention and diet pills are largely non-controvers­ial. But his plan to better regulate treatment facilities is set to be more contentiou­s.

“A lot of these practices are essential,” they said. “Eating disorders are tricky. They thrive in secrecy, they cause a lot of lying, they can be competitiv­e. It’s very hard to be a provider for an eating disorder patient. But at the same time, a lot of these things unknowingl­y replicate the worst aspects of my eating disorder.”

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