Link found between shoplifting and eating disorders in women
The Mainichi Daily News  
Women who habitually shoplift are also very often the victims of  eating disorders, suggests a survey by Akagi-kohgen Hospital in  Shibukawa, Gunma Prefecture.
The institute is a psychiatric hospital that specializes in treating  disorders like alcoholism. It found that over 70 percent of female  patients it surveyed who were receiving treatment for kleptomania also  had eating disorders like bulimia.
"Shoplifting is of course a crime, but in these types of cases,  treatment to prevent a recurrence is necessary," says hospital head  Michio Takemura.
Takemura and others surveyed 132 male and female patients that had  received treatment for kleptomania at the hospital and affiliated  clinics in the Tokyo metropolitan area from January 2008 through July  2009. Of the 92 female patients, 68, or 74 percent, also had eating  disorders. Of the 40 male patients, 4, or 10 percent, had eating  disorders, showing that the correlation was much higher in the female  patients.
Read Shoplifting/ED Link in full. 
Why are so many kids being treating for eating disorders?
ABC 15 
Did you know that the rate of kids 12 and  younger being hospitalized for eating disorders has risen 119% from 1999  to 2006? This is according to a recent study published by Journal of  American Pediatrics.
This is such a scary statistic, but why is this becoming an issue for kids so young?
Caroline Miller is someone who has overcome the mental illness of eating disorders.
She  wrote an autobiography called “My name is Caroline” in 1988 and at that  time was one of the first books to discuss eating disorders and put a  face on the disease. Caroline joined us on Smart Family to talk about  this battle of eating disorders.
Read So Many Kids in full. 
Tis The Season: Surviving The Holidays With An Eating Disorder
Sacramento Press
When we think of the holidays, our thoughts often go to family, friends, gift-giving, shopping and, yes, food.
Celebrating the season while sharing food with loved ones is part of  our collective culture and something we look forward to. But for  individuals struggling with an eating disorder, this can often be one of  the most distressing times of year.
In the United States, an estimated 8 million girls and women and 1  million boys and men struggle with an eating disorder. Although the  average age of onset is 14 to 16, there is no age, gender or cultural  limit on who struggles or for how long. Women and men in their 30s, 40s  and beyond struggle with anorexia, bulimia or binge eating disorder. An  estimated 10 percent die.
Read Tis The Season in full.
Check out 
this and 
also this for more holiday survival tips.  
'Plus-sized' model Crystal Renn looks decidedly 'model-sized' in Zac Posen's new look book
Los Angeles Times 
Crystal Renn, a former traditional-sized model who became the poster  girl for plus-sized modeling after gaining weight and writing about her  struggle with anorexia, is still ruffling feathers for seemingly  dropping the pounds that make her "plus." 
Renn, who co-stars in designer Zac Posen's pre-fall 2011 look book,  was never plus-sized in the traditional, size-10-to-14 sense (she claims  to be a size 8), but looks even tinier in the new photographs -- a fact  that hasn't escaped chatty fashion watchers online.
 
Read Crystal Renn in full.
Among Jewish women, eating disorders go under-reported
Stigma of mental illness on marriageability is cited
 The Washington Times
COCONUT CREEK, Fla. | Hilary Waller remembers begging her mother to let her fast on Yom Kippur. At 10 years old, she was a bit too young, but embracing the rigid discipline seemed desperately important.
"It felt like I was practicing not eating. It was something that was reassuring and gave me strength and a sense of pride," said Ms. Waller, now a 28-year-old teacher at a religious school in Blue Bell, Pa.
It was the same rush she got years later in college each time she saw the scale tip downward. Ms. Waller, who suffered from anorexia, starved herself until she stopped menstruating, lost some of her hair and was exercising several times a day.
Health experts say eating disorders are a serious, underreported disease among Orthodox Jewish women and to a lesser extent others in the Jewish community, as many families are reluctant to acknowledge the illness at all and often seek help only when a girl is on the verge of hospitalization.
Read EDs go under-ground in full.
I’m not fat, says ballerina faulted for ‘too many sugarplums’ 
Today MSNBC
A ballerina who overcame anorexia doesn’t need or want an apology from the New York Times critic who made a crack about her weight in a review of “The Nutcracker,” saying the comment hurt initially but is just part of being a professional in a field that demands perfection from those who work in it.
“As a dancer, I do put myself out there to be criticized, and my body is part of my art form,” Jenifer Ringer, 37, told TODAY’s Ann Curry during an interview Monday. “At the same time, I am not overweight.
"
Read Ballerina in full.
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