<p>At the height of her eating disorder, Zhang Qinwen was the weight of a child. Her hair fell out, she was unable to walk and she could barely see.</p>.<p>"I knew that I was seriously unwell, but I did not dare go to the doctor," the 23-year-old, now a leading campaigner in China on the issue, told <em>AFP</em> at a landmark exhibition in Shanghai.</p>.<p>While disordered eating can affect anyone, western studies have indicated they are most prevalent in teenage girls and young women, and often those already impacted by other mental health problems.</p>.<p>"I was simply affected by the internet and had low self-esteem back then," said Zhang, who weighed just 28 kilos (60 pounds) before ending up in intensive care.</p>.<p>"I thought I was not perfect enough."</p>.<p>She is far from alone, but despite some Chinese hospitals warning of fast-rising cases, recognition in China is limited — as is the availability of treatment.</p>.<p>Zhang, who studied in Britain, said in comparison "in China, you may talk to many people, including counsellors and non-specialist clinics, and perhaps they don't know what the disease is and how to help us".</p>.<p><strong>Read | <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/sunday-herald/sunday-herald-melange/weighing-on-the-mind-977662.html" target="_blank">Weighing on the mind</a></strong></p>.<p>Her exhibition, which hopes to shine a light on the illness, has haunting paintings of a tearful school girl, displays of discarded medication and the word "KILL" projected on a whitewash wall.</p>.<p>While there are no national statistics, hospitals in major Chinese cities have reported steep increases of people seeking treatment.</p>.<p>In Shanghai, a mental health clinic said it treated just three cases of eating disorders in 2002 — but saw 591 people who identified as having similar issues in 2018.</p>.<p>Two years ago the state-run China Youth Daily, citing a Beijing hospital, said that from 2002 to 2012 the number of ED patients jumped from about 20 annually to more than 180.</p>.<p>In 2011 the hospital opened a specialist ward.</p>.<p>The increase in people recognising their disordered eating has led to suggestions the issue is a "foreign phenomenon" that only arrived in China recently.</p>.<p>"For my parents' generation, when they were young, being fat was a way to prove that you came from good family background," said 21-year-old student Xie Feitong at Zhang's exhibition.</p>.<p><strong>Also Read | <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/international/world-news-politics/luxury-in-the-clouds-shanghai-opens-worlds-highest-hotel-1000986.html" target="_blank">Luxury in the clouds: Shanghai opens world's highest hotel</a></strong></p>.<p>State broadcaster CGTN also linked eating disorders with the country's growing wealth.</p>.<p>"As Chinese society starts to focus more on personal well-being and higher standards of living, more women are speaking out about their struggle with obsessing over weight loss and a flawless body image," it said.</p>.<p>Like in other countries, social media in China can play a role in propagating what the ideal body should look like.</p>.<p>Viral posts online — often around challenges demonstrating how thin a person is — can encourage body-shaming and bullying, and tap into the dominant beauty ideal of pale skin and thin bodies.</p>.<p>Offline, pervasive beauty standards endure: earlier this month a gallery was forced to pull a photo exhibition that ranked women's attractiveness after an outcry.</p>.<p>Zhang's exhibition responds to many of those harmful stereotypes, with female participants taking part in a performance — parodying marriage — to celebrate and accept their bodies.</p>.<p>Her story of extreme weight loss, mental torture and reluctance to seek help was echoed by several young women at the show.</p>.<p><strong>Also Read | <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/international/fitch-ratings-does-not-expect-chinas-three-child-policy-to-boost-births-1002442.html" target="_blank">Fitch Ratings does not expect China's three-child policy to boost births</a></strong></p>.<p>Others described being bullied at school for not being thin enough, white enough or pretty enough.</p>.<p>Most rejected the notion that eating disorders were "new" to China – although all agree that it is only in the last one or two years that the issue has been publicised.</p>.<p>Xie believes that Chinese women have been emboldened by the global #MeToo movement to challenge traditional ideas of what constitutes beauty in China.</p>.<p>"I am dark and fat – the opposite of white, young and thin," said Xie, who battled anorexia from the age of 13 and was hospitalised.</p>.<p>"But in the process of my recovery, I feel that a healthy skin tone, a sturdy body and a strong heart are the most important thing in this world."</p>.<p>Zhang, a wedding veil on her head, added: "We always felt that our bodies had many defects.</p>.<p>"At this 'wedding' we want to say that we are truly in love with ourselves."</p>
<p>At the height of her eating disorder, Zhang Qinwen was the weight of a child. Her hair fell out, she was unable to walk and she could barely see.</p>.<p>"I knew that I was seriously unwell, but I did not dare go to the doctor," the 23-year-old, now a leading campaigner in China on the issue, told <em>AFP</em> at a landmark exhibition in Shanghai.</p>.<p>While disordered eating can affect anyone, western studies have indicated they are most prevalent in teenage girls and young women, and often those already impacted by other mental health problems.</p>.<p>"I was simply affected by the internet and had low self-esteem back then," said Zhang, who weighed just 28 kilos (60 pounds) before ending up in intensive care.</p>.<p>"I thought I was not perfect enough."</p>.<p>She is far from alone, but despite some Chinese hospitals warning of fast-rising cases, recognition in China is limited — as is the availability of treatment.</p>.<p>Zhang, who studied in Britain, said in comparison "in China, you may talk to many people, including counsellors and non-specialist clinics, and perhaps they don't know what the disease is and how to help us".</p>.<p><strong>Read | <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/sunday-herald/sunday-herald-melange/weighing-on-the-mind-977662.html" target="_blank">Weighing on the mind</a></strong></p>.<p>Her exhibition, which hopes to shine a light on the illness, has haunting paintings of a tearful school girl, displays of discarded medication and the word "KILL" projected on a whitewash wall.</p>.<p>While there are no national statistics, hospitals in major Chinese cities have reported steep increases of people seeking treatment.</p>.<p>In Shanghai, a mental health clinic said it treated just three cases of eating disorders in 2002 — but saw 591 people who identified as having similar issues in 2018.</p>.<p>Two years ago the state-run China Youth Daily, citing a Beijing hospital, said that from 2002 to 2012 the number of ED patients jumped from about 20 annually to more than 180.</p>.<p>In 2011 the hospital opened a specialist ward.</p>.<p>The increase in people recognising their disordered eating has led to suggestions the issue is a "foreign phenomenon" that only arrived in China recently.</p>.<p>"For my parents' generation, when they were young, being fat was a way to prove that you came from good family background," said 21-year-old student Xie Feitong at Zhang's exhibition.</p>.<p><strong>Also Read | <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/international/world-news-politics/luxury-in-the-clouds-shanghai-opens-worlds-highest-hotel-1000986.html" target="_blank">Luxury in the clouds: Shanghai opens world's highest hotel</a></strong></p>.<p>State broadcaster CGTN also linked eating disorders with the country's growing wealth.</p>.<p>"As Chinese society starts to focus more on personal well-being and higher standards of living, more women are speaking out about their struggle with obsessing over weight loss and a flawless body image," it said.</p>.<p>Like in other countries, social media in China can play a role in propagating what the ideal body should look like.</p>.<p>Viral posts online — often around challenges demonstrating how thin a person is — can encourage body-shaming and bullying, and tap into the dominant beauty ideal of pale skin and thin bodies.</p>.<p>Offline, pervasive beauty standards endure: earlier this month a gallery was forced to pull a photo exhibition that ranked women's attractiveness after an outcry.</p>.<p>Zhang's exhibition responds to many of those harmful stereotypes, with female participants taking part in a performance — parodying marriage — to celebrate and accept their bodies.</p>.<p>Her story of extreme weight loss, mental torture and reluctance to seek help was echoed by several young women at the show.</p>.<p><strong>Also Read | <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/international/fitch-ratings-does-not-expect-chinas-three-child-policy-to-boost-births-1002442.html" target="_blank">Fitch Ratings does not expect China's three-child policy to boost births</a></strong></p>.<p>Others described being bullied at school for not being thin enough, white enough or pretty enough.</p>.<p>Most rejected the notion that eating disorders were "new" to China – although all agree that it is only in the last one or two years that the issue has been publicised.</p>.<p>Xie believes that Chinese women have been emboldened by the global #MeToo movement to challenge traditional ideas of what constitutes beauty in China.</p>.<p>"I am dark and fat – the opposite of white, young and thin," said Xie, who battled anorexia from the age of 13 and was hospitalised.</p>.<p>"But in the process of my recovery, I feel that a healthy skin tone, a sturdy body and a strong heart are the most important thing in this world."</p>.<p>Zhang, a wedding veil on her head, added: "We always felt that our bodies had many defects.</p>.<p>"At this 'wedding' we want to say that we are truly in love with ourselves."</p>