Franken, Klobuchar sponsor bill to address eating disorders

By Andy Birkey
Thursday, April 29, 2010 at 9:41 am

Photos: Chris Steller/MnIndy, wdcpix

Both of Minnesota’s senators, Amy Klobuchar and Al Franken, as well as Iowa’s Sen. Tom Harkin, introduced the Federal Response to Eliminate Eating Disorders (FREED) Act on Tuesday, which would direct the federal government to track, screen, diagnose and treat eating disorders. The bill is the first of its kind in the Senate and will improve access to treatment for people suffering from eating disorders, especially teens on government assistance.

“The statistics on young people struggling with eating disorders are staggering,” Klobuchar said in a statement. “We must provide better resources for prevention and treatment to ensure that everyone has access to the help they need to treat and survive this often fatal disease.”

Franken added, “I hear far too often from Minnesotans who have dealt personally with a loved one who suffers from an eating disorder. The fact is, we don’t know nearly enough about diagnosing, treating, and preventing these diseases. Today’s legislation is a major step forward in understanding eating disorders and how to stop them from destroying lives.”

According to a press release from the senators, the bill will:

* Expand research on the prevention of and effective treatment of eating disorders: Coordinates research on eating disorders at the National Institutes of Health and across the federal government, and creates research consortia to examine the causes and consequences of eating disorders, and to develop effective prevention and intervention programs.

* Improve the training and education of health care providers and educators: Authorizes grants to medical, nursing, social work and other health professions schools to train health care providers in the identification and treatment of eating disorders, and grants to train teachers and other educators in effective eating disorder prevention, detection and assistance strategies.

* Improve surveillance and data collection systems for tracking the prevalence and severity of eating disorders: Tasks CDC with addressing the lack of accurate information on the incidence and severity of eating disorders. Requires the development of new methods to accurately collect, analyze and report epidemiological data to ensure that the incidence of eating disorders and related fatalities are better understood.

* Prevent eating disorders: Authorizes grants to develop evidence-based prevention programs and promote healthy eating behaviors and in schools, recreational sports programs and athletic training programs.

* Build on existing reform efforts to ensure that treatment is available and affordable: Creates a patient advocacy program to aid people suffering from these diseases and their families negotiate the health care system. Incentivizes states to ensure that adolescents covered by Medicaid are diagnosed and treated.

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Comments

4 Comments

Ginny
Comment posted April 29, 2010 @ 12:13 pm

I applaud Klobuchar and Franken for addressing this. Perhaps they can get Target CEO Gregg Steihafel (who lobbied to keep a 10 bed eating disorder clinic out of his neighborhood in Orono) to help.

http://www.startribune.com/local/west/86773117.html

By the way, StarTribune removed all 200 comments from this article – even though it was a helpful discussion and nothing was said about Steinhafel that was even close to what is said about Pawlenty on that site. So I guess we know who runs this town. (hint: they named the baseball stadium and the basketball arena)


Jimmy
Comment posted April 29, 2010 @ 2:19 pm

Great. Next will be a bill addressing premature ejaculation. The Founding Fathers would be so proud.


TheGloss
Pingback posted April 29, 2010 @ 2:59 pm

[...] Both of Minnesota’s senators, Al Franken and Amy Klobuchar, are sponsoring a new bill that would “track, screen, diagnose and treat” eating disorders. Thursday, April 29, [...]


Zera Lee
Comment posted April 30, 2010 @ 4:00 pm

I applaud them for their good intentions, and I support the advocacy aspects, but I do not think this is the time for new grant programs. This is the time for spring cleaning of the budget and the bureaucracy.


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