Eating Disorders
Chapter Five: Gambling, Eating Disorders, Shopping, and Other Behavioral Addictions Read the following case study: Swan is a 14-year-old student at the Sea-Cow School for the Performing Arts. Her goal in life is to be a world-acclaimed ballet dancer. She has been dancing ever since she was 4 years old, when her parents enrolled her in a Ballet for Tots program. Swans parents have always encouraged her to pursue her dream of dancing professionally. As a young girl, Swan had the perfect body for a ballet dancer, slim and flexible. Within the last year, Swan has become concerned that she is gaining weight. She heard from friends that smoking cigarettes could help her stay thin, although she didnt exactly know why. Swan became desperate to control her weight and started borrowing cigarettes from friends. Eventually, she was smoking almost a pack of cigarettes a day and felt edgy and irritable if she went without smoking for more than a few hours. She thought about trying diet pills or even barbiturates to avoid the smell of the cigarette smoke. Then refer to the following toolkit for parents: “National Eating Disorder Association: Parent ToolKit” https://www.nationaleatingdisorders.org/sites/default/files/Toolkits/ParentToolkit.pdf (Links to an external site.) Using the above toolkit, along with Chapter 5, and the materials from the field trip, compose a 300-word post that responds to the following questions: Swans parents have approached you, the school counselor, because they found rolling papers in her room. Although Swan denies using any other drugs, her parents are convinced that she has been smoking marijuana. How would you approach this as case as a school counselor? Do you think Swan is addicted or at risk for addiction? (If yes, which ones, and why?) What questions would you ask Swan and her parents? What recommendations would you make?