St. John's News

Eating Disorders Panel on Campus Focuses on Dangerous Problem

November 10, 2005

Queens Campus - Did you know that as many as one in three college women—and one in 10 college men—have disordered eating habits?  These habits can cause serious damage to health; they can even result in death!

“One-third of the cases of eating disorders are treatable, one-third will live with the condition for the rest of their lives and one-third will die,” says Jennifer Ann Polintan, a counselor in St. John’s University Counseling Center, who spearheaded a panel discussion on eating disorders co-sponsored by the Office of Health Services, the Counseling Center and the Women in Science Society. (An organization under the auspices of the Office of Grants and Sponsored Research, the Women in Science Society sponsors monthly programs on health topics relevant to the university community.)

“An eating disorder affects your mind and your body,” Polintan told a large audience of students as they munched on a light lunch in Council Hall. “It eventually controls you.” Polintan knows her subject. She worked for many years at the Eating Disorders Treatment Clinic at Schneider Children’s Hospital in Queens. (The hospital also treats young adults up to age 21.)

An eating disorder may present itself in people predisposed to use it as a means of coping with stress or other circumstances over which they feel they have little control, she explains. They may not be able to exert control over many aspects of their life, so they resort to controlling their eating in a harmful, self-destructive way. Often, people with disordered eating aren’t fully cognizant of their problem. “Perceptions become skewed when you don’t eat enough,” she says. People who have eating disorders may have a “drive for perfection, coping issues, family issues, a genetic predisposition, or feel societal pressure.”

Although people are most familiar with anorexia—severely restricting calories often to the point of self-starvation—there is a current trend on college campuses of bulimic women “over-exercising,” says Polintan.  Bulimics tend to binge and purge to control their weight. Up to 5 percent of college women in the U.S. are bulimic, according to a hand-out available at St. John’s Office of Health Services.

Mary Grace Webb, clinical nutrition manager, Nutrition Services, New York Hospital, Queens, told the assembled group that “when we [as a society] shifted our focus from health and feeling good to excessive emphasis on appearance, eating became disordered.” As the person who designed the “points” system used by Weight Watchers to help people adhere to a weight-loss or maintenance diet, Webb is familiar with the country’s weight problem and obsession. “Sixty-five percent of all Americans are either overweight or obese,” she says. “The only tried-and-true method [for staying trim and healthy] is to eat a variety of foods, drink water and move our bodies.”

Part of the problem many people have in maintaining a healthy weight is that “most people don’t know the basics of preparing food anymore,” she says. “The importance of nutrition [to health] is paramount.” Some practices such as skipping meals or eliminating entire food groups from the diet can be detrimental to health and lead to disordered eating patterns, she explained before the program.

Disordered eating and excessive dieting and self-restriction of calories and nutrients can have dire effects on the body, warned Pauline Tummino, director of St. John’s Queens Office of Health Services, in a pre-event interview. [She had been on the program but was unable to be present.] These are some of the ramifications:

  • Loss of electrolytes
  • Heart damage
  • Mental disorders such as the inability to concentrate  
  • Dental cavities
  • Hair loss
  • Skin scales
  • Loss of menstrual period (women)
  • Personality disorders, difficulty with interpersonal relationships

There is free psychiatric and medical help available on campus for students with an eating disorder. Contact the Counseling Center, Room 130, Marillac Hall, (718) 990-6383, or the Office of Health Services, DaSilva Hall (Residence Campus), (718) 990-6106.  There are also peer counselors available through the Alcohol, Drug and Wellness Program on campus, says Deborah Levi, assistant director, who was part of the panel. The organization is headquartered at the University Center, (718) 990-7537.