New PRHC Youth Eating Disorders Day Treatment Program and Clinic Space Recognizes $250,000 Scotiabank Pledge

The new Youth Eating Disorders Day Treatment Program area at Peterborough Regional Health Centre (PRHC) was unveiled and dedicated to Scotiabank’s $250,000 pledge on March 9.

photo courtesy of prhc.

Scotiabank regional leaders were at the hospital for the dedication event celebrating the bank’s $250,000 pledge to fund the essential treatment area for the program, which launched in December in response to devastating increases in demand. It will help fill the treatment gap between those who can be successfully treated in an out-patient setting, and those who need more supervised, acute treatment and support to avoid admission to hospital or a long-term residential program.

The program is designed to support youth 12 to 25 years old who need lifesaving care to normalize their eating and restore weight. 

The purpose-built unit and therapy space includes a kitchen and dining area made to feel more like a home than a facility. It helps address participant anxiety and stress around the preparation and consumption of meals and snacks, and encourages a successful transition post-program.

District vice president of the Ontario Central East at Scotiabank Chris Skinner says that the bank has a long history and strong culture of investing in the communities where they operate, and they’re pleased to support such an important area of care in the Peterborough region.

“Supporting the Youth Eating Disorders Day Treatment Program at PRHC is a vital opportunity to contribute to the mental and physical health of young people in this area now, so that they may have a better chance at a healthy future,” says Skinner.

Participants attend the clinic eight hours a day, five days a week for 12 weeks. They receive group and one-on-one psychological and nutritional counselling while attending school in a supported classroom and return home daily.

“Eating disorders are known to thrive in isolation, something young people have had an abundance of during the pandemic,” says Jennifer Cox, director of Mental Health & Addictions Services at PRHC. “When you combine changes in routine, the anxiety many of us are feeling about the future, and increased media attention on weight and our bodies, the result is a perfect storm for increasing susceptibility in developing life-threatening eating disorders.”

President and CEO at PRHC Foundation, said the hospital and Foundation are grateful to receive this funding, which has been having a tremendous impact on young people in the Peterborough region since the program opened.

“Even before the pandemic, referrals for PRHC’s outpatient program were on the rise. The impact of that pre-existing surge combined with pandemic-exacerbated mental health challenges is now being felt across the health system,” says Heighway. “PRHC’s doctors, nurses and staff want to give their patients and participants the best care possible, but we needed to invest in the safe, functional, and healing spaces that support that lifesaving and life-changing care. On behalf of everyone at PRHC and the many youth who rely on the Health Centre for eating disorders treatment, thank you to Scotiabank for sharing that vision and helping to ensure young people will receive the specialized, compassionate care they need and deserve.”

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Peterborough Mother Launches Indiegogo Campaign To Save Her Daughter From Dying Of Eating Disorder

Ingrid

Ingrid

[UPDATE: Huffington Post Canada picks up our story.]

Peterborough mother Susan Nelson has launched an impassioned Indiegogo campaign to help save her daughter Ingrid, who is fighting a serious Eating Disorder—and right now losing the battle.

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Ingrid, 23, is in immediate need of being transferred from her current placement in a hospital in Ontario to a specialized residential ED program for life saving treatment. But Provincial Health Insurance does not cover residential treatment of Eating Disorders, so the family find themselves facing having to pay for Ingrid's treatment—something they simply can't afford to do.

The costs include four months at an Ontario residential treatment centre followed by months of private aftercare programs—both not covered by insurance. 

Susan says on the Indiegogo campaign that not being able to afford treatment for their daughter is simply "one of the worst feelings any parent can imagine. There's nothing left for us to do other than ask for help from our extended community and beyond."

Ingrid, who is afraid she is going to die from the disorder—"I am barely alive," she says—writes that "Without a program, my eating disorder is becoming stronger and more intense, and I feel increasingly hopeless and consumed by this disease. My illness has progressed to a level out of my control. Unfortunately, they aren't experienced with eating disorders here at the hospital and I have continued to decline both mentally and physically. It is difficult for me to write honestly about the state I am in right now, as a huge part of my illness tries to minimize and ignore the severity of its hold on my life. But I have to push myself to face this reality, and to make others aware of what is happening."

Just days into the campaign, the family has already raised nearly $8,000 of their $60,000 goal—with 44 days left in the campaign.  [**UPDATE January 16th: They've now raised close to $15,000.]

Make a difference: Help save Ingrid's life by donating to this campaign to raise money for the family to get her into the specialized program.

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