Downs James
Person with Lived Experience & Peer Researcher Cardiff, Wales, UK.
J Eat Disord. 2025 Aug 29;13(1):196. doi: 10.1186/s40337-025-01375-y.
This Matters Arising piece responds to the article by Lubieniecki et al. (2025), which explores lived experience perspectives on the 'SEED' (Severe and Enduring Eating Disorder) classification. Written from the standpoint of someone with lived experience of a longstanding eating disorder and professional involvement in research, policy, and service development, the piece supports Lubieniecki et al.'s analysis of 'SEED' as both validating and restrictive. It extends their work by situating the classification within a broader landscape of psychiatric labelling associated with treatment exclusion. The limitations of replacing 'SEED' with alternative terminology alone are considered, with emphasis on the need for corresponding reforms to care pathways and their provision. The author highlights how diagnostic language can serve not only descriptive but also administrative and prognostic functions, often reflecting institutional constraints rather than individual need. The importance of co-produced approaches to diagnostic frameworks is also discussed, with emphasis on embedding lived experience throughout classificationand service design.
这篇“提出的问题”文章回应了卢别涅茨基等人(2025年)的文章,该文章探讨了对“严重及持续性饮食失调”(SEED)分类的生活经历观点。本文从一位长期患有饮食失调症且在研究、政策和服务发展方面有专业参与经历的人的角度撰写,支持卢别涅茨基等人对“SEED”的分析,认为其既有验证性又有局限性。文章通过将该分类置于与治疗排除相关的更广泛的精神病学标签背景中,扩展了他们的工作。文中考虑了仅用替代术语取代“SEED”的局限性,强调了对护理途径及其提供进行相应改革的必要性。作者强调诊断语言不仅可以起到描述作用,还具有管理和预后功能,常常反映的是机构限制而非个人需求。文中还讨论了共同制定诊断框架方法的重要性,强调在整个分类和服务设计过程中融入生活经历。