being able to discuss it means being able to access help; it means developing the attitude that something can be dealt with
in our case, dd is the first to have been treated for a hereditary tendency that has been around in every generation at least since my grandfather's day, but which was too much of a stigma for people to talk about
so she will be the first to appear in any statistics- but also the first where the whole burden does not have to be carried by family members
speaking as a family member, I do not see this as a wholly negative development...
also, I was a child in the 70s: at least 3 girls in my class developed anorexia in the same year; one other girl I knew well spent her 20s in and out of hospital with anorexia
to me, that is by far the scariest type of self-harming and the one that takes the longest to cure
anyway, how do you know these issues are definitely going to happen to your children, unless they already have happened?