Previous Page  4 / 13 Next Page
Information
Show Menu
Previous Page 4 / 13 Next Page
Page Background

Notes:

Page 44

Eating Disorders 2016

September 12-13, 2016

Volume 6, Issue 7(Suppl)

J Obes Weight Loss Ther 2016

ISSN: 2165-7904 JOWT, an open access journal

conferenceseries

.com

September 12-13, 2016 Philadelphia, USA

World Congress on

Eating Disorders, Nutrition & Mental Health

Innovation and technology: The role of social media in the prevention and education of anorexia nervosa

Anthony Tobia, Jason Mintz and Derek Rudge

Rutgers Robert Wood Johnson Medical School, USA

I

nnovation and technology have resulted in social change that has greatly impacted mental health. While adverse outcomes

are numerous, we aim to use innovation and technology to promote wellness. One area of this focus in higher education has

been the use of media such as film, coupled with social media such as Twitter® and Periscope®. Movies have long been utilized

to highlight varied areas in the field of psychiatry including the role of the psychiatrist, issues in medical ethics and the stigma

toward people with mental illness. Furthermore, courses designed to teach psychopathology to trainees have traditionally

used examples from art and literature to emphasize major teaching points. At Rutgers Robert Wood Johnson Medical School,

psychopathology such as the Eating & Feeding Disorders is taught to trainees through film. This is achieved by selected works

serving a metaphorical or symbolic role in the etiology, clinical presentation, course and prognosis of the mental illnesses

highlighted in our course syllabus. While REDRUMhas been extremely well-received at Rutgers and nationally, course directors

have recently begun streaming the didactic live over Periscope®. The goal of our new project is to provide education and

primary prevention strategies to all individuals irrespective of their medical background. Didactic: How Carrie is references in

teaching the Eating & Feeding Disorders: The Eating Disorders are characterized by a disturbance in perception of body image

resulting in severe disruption in eating behavior. The Eating Disorder section of the DSM-5 includes the diagnosis of anorexia

nervosa. While depicted as obese in the novel, Carrie is underweight in Brian De Palma’s film adaptation. It is therefore the

horror film that should be referenced by course directors when discussing Carrie as a case study of anorexia nervosa. Anorexia

nervosa is conceptualized in psychodynamic terms as a reaction to the demand that adolescents behave more independently

and increase their sexual functioning. Carrie replaces preoccupations about eating for these other age-specific pursuits. While

there is no overt evidence of an eating disorder in the movie, Carrie’s body is perceived as though it is possessed by introject

of an intrusive, domineering and unempathic mother. Starvation serves as an unconscious means of starving and destroying

the internal object. Mrs. White forbids Carrie from going to the prom one stormy night over dinner. Two important aspects

of the conversation included Carrie not eating any of her dinner and her use of telekinesis as the argument with her mother

escalates resulting in Mrs. White that Carrie is possessed by Satan. In the movie’s penultimate scene, Carrie kills her mother in

the kitchen by impaling her with knives, symbolic of Carrie’s preoccupation with food.

Biography

Anthony Tobia is trained in dual Residency in Internal Medicine and Psychiatry at West Virginia University. He currently holds titles of Associate Professor of

Psychiatry and Clinical Associate Professor of Internal Medicine at Rutgers Robert Wood Johnson Medical School. He serves as the Director of Medical Student

Education and Associate Program Director of Residency Training and is certified by the Board of Psychosomatic Medicine. He is the Director of the Division of

Psychosomatic Medicine at Rutgers-RWJMS. His academic interests include various innovative teaching approaches including six that are registered in the Office

of Patents and Licensing at Rutgers.

tobiaat@rwjms.rutgers.edu

Anthony Tobia et al., J Obes Weight Loss Ther 2016, 6:7(Suppl)

http://dx.doi.org/10.4172/2165-7904.C1.037