PITTSBURGH — A woman has filed what experts believe is a
first-of-its-kind lawsuit against the Pittsburgh Public Schools,
claiming her daughter developed anorexia because male students bullied
the girl about her weight, forcing her to leave the district.
But
those experts — including the head of the National Eating Disorders
Association — say linking bullying to anorexia is oversimplification,
at best.
"With eating disorders, we say you're born with a gun
and life pulls the trigger," said Lynn Grefe, chief executive officer
of Seattle-based NEDA, who has never heard of a school being sued over
such a scenario.
Generally, people who develop anorexia already
have issues with anxiety, obsessive-compulsive or perfectionist
behavior. Bullying could trigger anorexia in those people but not
others who are taunted about their weight, Grefe said.
"The
person's often a real high achiever, and if you put those people in a
situation and then their world comes crashing down, they get
triggered," Grefe said.
That's essentially what's described in
the 10-page federal lawsuit Pittsburgh attorney Edward Olds filed
Friday on behalf of an unnamed woman whose middle-school sixth-grader
began to be bullied 2006-07 by three boys who called her "fat."
The
girl was in a program for gifted students, made straight A's and was
active in community and volunteer programs, the lawsuit said.
The
lawsuit contends a guidance counselor did nothing to stop the bullying.
The next year, in seventh grade, two other boys joined in the daily
harassment.
"Some other students tried to shame the boys about
the conduct. However, no faculty member or other school official
intervened," the lawsuit said.
By February 2008, the girl entered an inpatient treatment program for anorexia nervosa because "her weight was dangerously low."
The girl's mother contends school officials harassed her when she tried to home-school the girl, who now attends private school.
The woman's attorney didn't return calls for comment and a school attorney says only that he'll vigorously defend the district.
Although
experts say they've never heard of a lawsuit alleging that anorexia
resulted from school bullying, suits over school-based bullying are not
new.
The lawsuit contends the school's alleged failure to protect
the girl violates Title IX, an antidiscrimination law affecting any
school that receives federal funding.
Title IX has most often
been cited in lawsuits about disparities in the number of athletic
opportunities and scholarships afforded to male and female athletes.
But
the U.S. Supreme Court says peer-on-peer gender harassment also
violates Title IX if the school should have stopped the abuse and a
student lost an educational opportunity as a result, said Tom Hutton,
senior staff attorney for the National School Boards Association.
Hutton
has never seen a suit claiming school bullying caused anorexia, though
Title IX bullying suits are becoming more common. "But I wouldn't say
I've seen a tidal wave of them," he said.
Dr. Alberto Goldwaser,
a forensic psychiatrist and expert witness on mental illnesses from New
York University, cautioned against linking bullying directly to
anorexia.
Goldwaser says adolescent girls with high-achieving, perfectionist tendencies are prime candidates for the disorder.
"But
we cannot say that anorexia is caused by bullying or brain issues or
mother-daughter relationships or any one thing," Goldwaser said.
Yet another legal expert said that focusing on the girl's anorexia misses the point of bullying lawsuits.
"Very
often it's nervous orders of different kinds that are alleged in these
lawsuits," said Bruce Ledewitz, a Duquesne University law professor.
That this girl developed anorexia "is completely incidental."
The
issue, instead, is whether the bullying "deprives the victim of an
educational opportunity. That's the language that's been used in these
suits all along."