There are several ways to get involved with eating disorder advocacy efforts. Celebrating International No Diet Day and Eating Disorder Awareness Week can be a way to get involved.
The goals of the day are to:
The goals of EDAW are to:
The campaign for 2023, Transforming the Narrative from Asks to Action, aims to help people understand the connection between Eating Disorders and other co-occurring conditions or intersections of disadvantage (e.g., mental health conditions, trauma, systemic issues), and to help people take action to support people affected.
The campaign for 2022, Everyone has a role to play, aims to recognize that we all have a role to play in Eating Disorder prevention and recovery. Depending on who we are in a person's life, the specifics of that role might differ. We've created three tools to help you figure out the role you can play as you support yourself or someone else.
The campaign for 2021 builds on the previous year's theme, “Eating Disorders Can’t Afford to Wait”, asking, “What happened while we waited?” as the primary message for 2021. We believe that this is a way for us to talk about all of the nuances of this time — the negative and positive implications of the pandemic — while also holding space for those who have been waiting for a long time for the care they deserve.
In 1986, around 40 people gathered from across the United States, Canada, and the United Kingdom to talk about organizing an international Eating Disorders Awareness Week (EDAW).
NEDIC became the national coordinator for EDAW in 1988. During this time, various eating disorder advocacy groups, professionals, and treatment programs in Canada began to recognize it annually during the first week of February. Through the collaborative efforts of community-based eating disorders groups across the country, EDAW eventually gained official recognition in municipalities, provinces, and territories. Over the years, proclamations have been made in the Yukon, British Columbia, Alberta, Manitoba, Saskatchewan, Ontario, Nova Scotia, and Newfoundland & Labrador.
For many years, EDAW focused on the message, “Celebrating our natural sizes”. As we approached the mid-2010s, the annual steering committees diversified the campaign’s themes and activities.
Past themes included:
EDAW activities have traditionally included but has not been limited to the dissemination of educational materials, advocacy initiatives, panel discussions, arts-based community events, community chats on Twitter, community rooms held virtually via Zoom, and lighting up monuments (#ShowUsYourPurple).