A note from the editor
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It started, as many big stories do, with a single tip: Girls at Corona
del Mar High School were snorting Ritalin to lose weight.
That quickly led to a news story: Corona del Mar students were detained
at the Tijuana border crossing last fall by U.S. Customs officials, who
questioned why the girls were bringing bootleg Ritalin into the country.
But the story didn’t end there. It was just the beginning. One question
led to another.
Why were Corona del Mar students buying Ritalin with such frequency in
Mexico that one Tijuana pharmacy posted a photo of two girls on the wall,
adopting them as their mascot?
How many girls were abusing Ritalin in an attempt to shed pounds?
Was this a symptom of a bigger problem with eating disorders on campus?
And why did this phenomenon seem centered at Corona del Mar High?
And so began a three-month investigation. Daily Pilot reporter Jessica
Garrison interviewed more than 40 Corona del Mar students and 20 more
from Newport Harbor High. She talked with more than 15 parents in
addition to counselors, doctors and nutritionists who deal with eating
disorders.
And this is what she found.
The Corona del Mar High School community has a problem. Many girls -- not
just a handful, but a sizable minority -- are using Ritalin to lose
weight. Others think a fat-free pretzel and a Diet Coke is a perfect
lunch.
It’s a campus filled with girls who have an unhealthy obsession with
their weight, although it’s often cloaked in the guise of “being
healthy.”
While it’s impossible to know the exact numbers, eating disorders have
landed many, many girls in doctors’ and nutritionists’ offices.
Last year, according to one student, at least two girls ended up in the
hospital. In one of the most affluent communities in the world, scores of
youngsters go to bed hungry.
The reasons are many. Intense pressure to succeed, a huge emphasis on
appearance in this beach community, easily accessible drugs and the
notion that you can and should use any means necessary to mold your body
into the rail-thin shapes seen in fashion magazines.
We know this will be a controversial story. We know some will feel
attacked, and others will even question whether the story is true.
It is.
There’s also some good news here. The faculty at Corona del Mar has
already taken a number of intelligent steps to curb the problem of eating
disorders on campus. That’s what people in this community have come to
expect from Corona.
But life for its high school students isn’t perfect, and the existence of
life-threatening problems shouldn’t be denied because people are afraid
to shatter Corona’s image.
And so we give you this story.
We’d like your thoughts about it. Please e-mail us at
[email protected] or call us at (949) 642-6086. Thank you.
-- William Lobdell, editor
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