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The chief symptom is shocking: self-starvation leading to a devastating weight loss. The treatment is difficult, the cure elusive, and facts about the disease are not well known. Yet anorexia nervosa, an illness that was once quite rare, now afflicts increasing numbers of adolescents.
In "The Golden Cage," a renowned psychiatrist-recognized as one of the world's leading authorities on anorexia nervosa-relates her experience and discoveries in dealing with this baffling disorder. It is not, as the name implies, simply a loss of appetite. Rather, it involves a relentless pursuit of excessive thinness, undertaken despite continual hunger, acute pain, and occasionally fatal consequences. Dr. Bruch uses numerous examples from her own case studies to give a vivid picture of the causes, effects, and possible treatment of the disease. Her main concern: how can the symptoms be detected before they become entrenched as anorexia?
The victims of anorexia are mostly adolescent and preadolescent girls who have otherwise been model children from "good homes." Often they feel trapped by unattainable goals and expectations-a golden cage of privilege where they feel they do not belong and cannot survive. Dr. Bruch's experience has convinced her that early diagnosis is essential to any treatment of anorexia, and her book is addressed "to physicians, teachers, school counselors, and parents-to all who are in a position of observing these youngsters before a chronic and often irreversible state develops."
Hilde Bruch is Professor of Psychiatry at Baylor College of Medicine and is the author of numerous articles and books, including "Eating Disorders." Her latest book, "Learning Psychotherapy: Rationale and Ground Rules," was published by Harvard University Press.
An extraordinary achievement Bruch wrote with clarity, insight and compassion of her cases during the anorexia outbreak of the early 70s, an epidemic that seemed to arise out of nowhere, with no official diagnosis.--Holly Brubach"New York Times Style Magazine" (05/01/2007)"
An extraordinary achievement... Bruch wrote with clarity, insight and compassion of her cases during the anorexia outbreak of the early '70s, an epidemic that seemed to arise out of nowhere, with no official diagnosis.--Holly Brubach"New York Times Style Magazine" (05/01/2007)
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