Prevention & Health Promotion

celebrating our natural sizesDespite common belief, it is possible to prevent the development of food and weight preoccupations and eating disorders. It is also possible to prevent existing eating disorders from getting worse.

From learning about and improving on our own self-esteem and body image, to working with others and making positive societal changes, the following information can help us to reduce the occurrence of disordered eating.


Prevention of Disordered Eating

What is the key to prevention? Understanding that you can make a difference and that you can affect the people around you. If we work together we can stop people from hating their bodies, thinking too much about their weight, and developing eating disorders.

Your prevention project does not have to be expensive or complicated. Prevention can be as simple as:

Prevention can also happen every time you talk to people. When you talk about food and weight problems, make sure you:

Consider the following ideas for us all, for families and friends, for educators, and for administrators.

You can start changes in your home, school, workplace, sports or hobby group, place of worship, camp and anywhere else you can think of. Explore the What's New section or contact NEDIC and other community organizations for a list of Eating Disorder Awareness Week and International No Diet Day events in your area. For ideas on how to start an event in your community, explore the Ideas for EDAW & INDD section.

Ideas for Us All

Here are some additional things all of us can do:

Model a healthy lifestyle. When others see you eating well and being physically active in a normal, ongoing way, without preaching or over-emphasis, they will accept these behaviours as normal. You can be a role model to guide them.

Remind people how to identify symptoms of stress: Shallow, fast breathing; sweaty palms; racing heart; headaches or stomach-aches; a panicky sensation. Suggest things to do to calm down.

Model and teach ways to deal with stress and conflict: Deep breathing, progressive relaxation exercises, a solitary walk, quiet time alone, listening to or playing music. You can also teach ways to deal with stressful situations, such as:

Help others to develop self-esteem based on qualities other than physical appearance: Comment on and affirm characteristics that contribute to the smooth working of a study group or class. Be specific with your compliments:

Don't ignore negative comments about physical appearance, including size, shape, cultural dress or race. Do not allow belittling remarks based on racial, sexist or other stereotypes. Use them as teachable moments without shaming anyone.

Teach critical thinking skills. Help others learn to analyze, synthesize, apply and evaluate.

Teach about aspects of self and life that one can influence, and help people feel stronger and more able to cope.

Get rid of your diet!
Fight against the main cause of eating disorders - dieting. All you need is a trash can. Put one in your office, school or home. Get rid of all those negative products in your life. Fill it with dieting how-to guides, calorie counters, bathroom scales, diet pills, laxatives and other diet products. Be real. Free your body and your mind. Spend your money and your passion on something that matters.

Get rid of your scale!
Numbers can be deceiving. Listen to your body. Let it tell you how healthy you are. Remember that your weight is not a measurement of your health or self-worth. Make health and vitality your goal, not a specific weight. Read about Dieting Facts & Fiction and how diets that restrict calories are harmful to your emotional and physical health.

Avoid labelling food "bad," "sinful," or "junk food."
Labels like this can make you feel guilty or ashamed for eating "bad food". If we think this way, we can restrict, and then binge, on certain foods. Remember that a healthy diet includes both regularly eating nutritious food and occasionally eating less nutritious, high calorie food. Use different labels for food like "sometimes food" and "everyday food."

Do not encourage or laugh at jokes that make fun of a person's size or body.
Find a direct and gentle way to say that a person's worth and morality are not related to how they look.

Criticize the culture that promotes unhealthy body image, not your self.
Look at how encouraging people to dislike their bodies helps to sell products. Even young children can understand this. Encourage children to question, evaluate and respond to the messages that promote unhealthy body image and low self-esteem.

Tell the media what you think: they do listen.
Write a letter to the editor of a newspaper, call a TV station, radio station or newspaper. Let them know what you think of their advertisements, articles, stories, etc. Organize a shredding table at a local community centre and invite the public to bring and shred their most despised adverts and articles. Provide a paper shredder or scissors and a wastepaper basket. Invite the media. Work within your community to gather petitions through schools, community health centres and youth organizations. Help raise awareness of harmful images and messages by contacting local media activism organizations, such as MediaWatch or Adbusters. Send copies of the petitions to the offending company and to your provincial or federal standards association. The Advertising Standards Canada is one such association responsible for all print and television advertisements in Canada. Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission (CRTC) also deals with any radio, televised or Internet complaints.

Tell advertisers how much you appreciate positive advertisements. This increases the likelihood of them using more inclusive and real images. For examples of positive examples, visit the About Face website.

Celebrate Eating Disorder Awareness Week (EDAW) and International No Diet Day in your community. For ideas and information see Ideas for EDAW.

Ideas for Families

Children develop their beliefs and behaviours from the adults that they love and respect. You can make a positive difference to the children in your life. Emotionally healthy children depend on positive relationships with both male and female caretakers.

Teach children that their self-worth is not related to how they look. Emphasize their talents and qualities. Don't focus on their physical appearance.

Give children healthy choices, and teach them to make informed decisions about what they eat. Involve them in planning meals, shopping and cooking.

Emphasize the positive aspects of healthy eating, rather than focusing on the effects of unhealthy eating.

Do not use food as a reward or punishment. If you use food as a reward or comfort, or if you restrict food as a punishment, you are sending the message that food leads to love and acceptance. This may encourage children to seek out food for comfort or self-punishment.

Encourage children to take responsibility for their own well-being. This will help them learn to listen to their bodies.

Make your family meals a peaceful time for enjoying food and talking with each other. Save arguments, TV shows, telephone calls and difficult decisions for another time.

Live with a positive attitude to body image, not with a focus on food and weight. Show how you can be happy, healthy and active at any body size. Avoid complaining about your body, particularly in front of children. Don't talk about diets, calories and weight.

Model a healthy lifestyle. Balance work and leisure time.

Encourage self-awareness and critical thinking skills. These will help children evaluate new information using their own values, strengths and needs. Children who can do this are more likely to resolve their problems in healthy ways rather than by using food and weight manipulation as coping strategies.

Be aware of advertising and toys aimed at children. Notice how they reinforce gender stereotypes and body dissatisfaction. Encourage a conversation about how the child in your care views the advertisement or the toy. Foster critical thinking. and playfulness.

Work toward identifying and resisting all forms of discrimination. Remember that prejudice against size and body relates to prejudice based on sex, race, sexuality, class and physical ability.

Ideas for Educators

Research shows that it might be harmful to teach students about eating disorders. Some students might learn to glamourize disturbed eating patterns. Information must be age appropriate.

Instead, teach students about general health. This can include:

Prevention must take place on many levels:

These ideas come from the Comprehensive Healthy Schools Prevention Programs, courtesy of the Ontario Community Outreach Program for Eating Disorders (1-800-463-1856).

Visit our Resource Library for more information sources.

Ideas for Administrators

Administrators are in a unique position to effect change in our communities. Below are several suggestions to help turn the tide of eating disorders:

Organize staff development sessions for teachers and administrators. Encourage teachers to examine their own attitudes toward physical appearance and their own body image. Highlight the importance of being role models for their students. This does not mean being "perfect". It does mean being willing to explore and resolve difficult issues. Equip teachers with practical skills to deal with self-esteem and body image issues. Invite local agencies and/or community health organizations to lead training sessions in your school. Contact Us to connect with organizations that can lead training sessions in your school.

Organize a parent information session to teach parents how their attitudes affect their children's body image. Involve parents in developing policy and curriculum. Equip parents with ideas on how to deal with self-esteem, body image issues, and problem food and weight behaviours in their children.

Establish an effective school-wide policy on teasing and bullying. Ensure that you include physical appearance in your anti-bullying and anti-discrimination policies. Involve parents, students, teachers and school administrators in developing this policy.

Introduce Peer Mediation Programs or Anti-Bullying programs in your school. Consider a peer support program between senior and junior students to help younger students feel less afraid, stressed and isolated. Older students will feel greater self-esteem and learn leadership and problem-solving skills.

Develop a classroom behaviour agreement with your students. Ask them each to sign the agreement, and display the terms of agreement in a place where they can all see it. Commit to respecting each other's point of view, listening, respecting differences and challenging stereotypes.

Develop a school health program where students receive consistent positive messages about healthy eating attitudes and behaviours and healthy body image. Focus on health and well-being, not physical appearance. Respect the wide range of ethnic foods eaten. Involve teachers, administrators, families, community leaders and students when you develop this program. Make sure the school staff agree to treat students' bodies respectfully and do not make comments about students' body shapes and size.

Work with the library. Give your librarian a list of books that are appropriate for different age groups - you can find a list of helpful books, magazines and videos in our Resource Library. Ask your school library and local libraries to stop subscribing to fashion magazines. Encourage them to order magazines that promote healthier images. Examples are New Moon, for girls between the ages of 9 and 14, Reluctant Hero, and Shameless for older teens.

Involve food services at your school. Encourage your school to provide a variety of nutritious foods to children in the cafeteria, at school activities and at fundraising events. Support every effort to promote healthy eating.

Learn to recognize the signs of someone at risk. The BodyWise handbook is an excellent, free resource for school personnel, teachers, nurses, coaches, and other educators. The handbook includes tips for identifying disordered eating, and suggestions for:

Teach children critical-thinking skills to help them identify and resist cultural messages that could promote negative body image. Teachers can integrate media literacy lessons into many subjects, such as social sciences, literature, history and health. For more information see our Resource Library.

With your students, examine the images in your school. Look at posters, books, magazines or even activities that promote stereotypical representations of the ideal beautiful or healthy body.

Provide children with alternative images of healthy bodies. For example, showcase pictures of athletes of all different sizes and shapes, including athletes who are differently abled. Put the pictures under the title "Healthy bodies come in all shapes and sizes." Normalise and celebrate diversity by having a range of pictures around the school. Check out our Online Store for appropriate posters, or go to your local art gallery.

REMEMBER: We don't need to change our bodies. We need to change our attitudes!

Eating Disorder Awareness Week

Eating Disorder Awareness Week (EDAW) is an annual effort by groups across Canada, the U.S., Europe and Australasia to educate the public on the relationship between dieting, body dissatisfaction and eating disorders. The goal is to increase awareness of the factors causing individuals, particularly women, to develop anorexia, bulimia and weight preoccupation.

EDAW continues to be a huge success. A number of organizations and community groups work together to promote healthy body image and self-esteem, and to celebrate the diversity of shapes and sizes in our culture during the first week in February.

Why do we need an EDAW?

Self-esteem and social value are still unrelentingly connected to physical appearance, particularly for women. The beauty ideal today is uniformly thin, white, able-bodied, smooth-skinned, young and "glamourous". Given that less than 1% of us fit this ideal, it is not surprising that most women in our society are dissatisfied with their bodies. The displacement of other issues onto our bodies creates pressure to meet an unattainable standard of beauty, and leads us to develop harmful feelings toward ourselves and our bodies.

Many women and men act on these feelings and go to dangerous and damaging lengths to change their bodies. Given that we have a genetic predisposition to a particular weight, shape and size, it is no wonder that dieting fails for 95% of individuals.

This is why the slogan "Celebrating Our Natural Sizes!" was chosen for Eating Disorder Awareness Week.

The week encourages individuals to move away from one narrow ideal of beauty to healthy lifestyles and a celebration of natural diversity. This allows people to accept their bodies, get beyond appearance, and concentrate on putting their energies into more empowering, enjoyable activities. It is important to take a strong stand in challenging rigid, unrealistic and damaging expectations.

When is EDAW held?

Different countries commemorate EDAW at different times. In Canada, it is always the first full week in February. Having a consistent date is important. It takes many years of consistency for a commemorative event to 'register', and to become a norm in the minds of the media, organizations, participants and influencers. Having a nationally uniform time for such events increases media pick-up and increases the overall impact of the event.

Goals and Objectives of EDAW

GOAL:
To reduce the prevalence of anorexia, bulimia, dieting and body image problems through a public education program emphasizing social factors causing their development.

OBJECTIVES:

How you can get involved

Check out the current and Past Event Listing for ideas on activities and events you can become a part of. Alternatively, there are plenty of ideas for organizing your own events in the Ideas For EDAW & INDD section of this website.

International No Diet Day

International No Diet Day (INDD) was founded by Mary Evans Young of DietBreakers in England. It is now celebrated across Canada and internationally on May 6 of each year. Young established the day to express frustration with societal standards of appearance that pressure us to be thin, often with devastating results. Results range from all degrees of food and weight obsession to potentially deadly eating disorders and weight-loss surgery, depression and suicide.

International No Diet Day has become a widely used opportunity for health-care educators to challenge unfounded beliefs around food and weight issues, and to encourage healthy lifestyles for individuals, regardless of size and weight.

The goals of the day are to:

NEDIC is available to provide ideas, strategies and consultation to individuals and groups wishing to develop an EDAW event or awareness campaign, or find out about listing of EDAW and INDD events in your area.

Each one of us can make a difference!

Ideas for EDAW & INDD

Public Forum/Speak Out

Videos

Information Booths

Booths can be set up in shopping malls, schools, your local city hall, community centre or women's centre, in order to:

NOTE: In our experience, people are often reluctant to approach an eating disorder information booth. Consider naming your booth something that has a broader appeal. It may be helpful to attract attention by providing handouts and promotional materials, or having a contest for a prize.

Public/Elementary Schools

Note: There is research to show that it can be harmful to teach about eating disorders to younger students as they may take away incorrect messages and learn unhealthy behaviours. Please consult NEDIC or an expert in your local area on what are age appropriate information and activities.

College/University

Other Ideas

How to Promote Fearless Friday

Schools: Try to involve food services in promoting Fearless Friday. Ask cafeterias to provide a special menu, discounts, or a free cookie with purchases.

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