Dr. Sloan investigates the demise of a television star who may have died because of compulsive dieting.Dr. Sloan investigates the demise of a television star who may have died because of compulsive dieting.Dr. Sloan investigates the demise of a television star who may have died because of compulsive dieting.
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Michelle Burke
- Claire Sheldrake
- (as Michelle Rene Thomas)
Nicolas Mize
- Carl
- (as Nick Mize)
- Director
- Writers
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaThis episode, which is centered on obsession with losing weight, is the only one where Steve is involved with a woman who is healthily over average size. She never appears again.
- ConnectionsReferences Less Than Zero (1987)
Featured review
Dr. Sloan and his crew wind up intervening to rescue two sisters struggling with eating disorders
This episode, 11 of season 8, filmed in 2001 during the last season of Diagnosis Murder showed so much genuine insight rather than expected sensationalism that it is what media can do at its finest. It educated and informed in a caring way about the tricky process involved in developing and curing an eating disorder where awareness of the problem is often absent in the person as well as the support environment. Awareness is needed and aid consistently provided in order to heal before the spiral down causes death. Dr. Sloan and gang address all of the problems and show how cure is so possible with a team approach and genuine love. The two sisters, Heather and Thalia, showed eating disorders with totally different characteristics. Thalia was anorexic and a young and involved professional, while Heather was bulimic and in high school. A refreshing twist, they didn't have the expected support of family. There wasn't a neat package to drop this one into. It didn't show parents wringing their hands or outbursts over wanting to make the cheer leading squad. It showed abandonment issues, loneliness and basic human needs in an amazing way. Dr. Sloan created a family of friendship, thus providing a safe and nurturing environment for happiness and good health. The writer and director of this episode had such tremendous skill and feeling. The characters quickly became very human with shockingly devastating disorders and difficult to realize. They showed the problem, possible causes and then realistic cure methods with support and love being central to the well being needed for anyone to thrive. It's a must see and a harbinger for eating disorder awareness. I was stunned at the quality of the one hour show and wanted to immediately discover the producer, casting agent, director and writer of such fine material. It's an episode everyone should see. Cautionary for young children, Thalia looks great and smiles frequently, but the anorexia causes such fluid imbalance and heart disturbances that she does die before anyone realizes how much trouble she is in. She didn't know. She was trying to obtain goals or be the best that she could be without knowing that she was instead, killing herself. It demonstrated that addressing and providing support quickly and consistently are essential. That's all it took for Heather to slowly heal from bulimia. As Dr. Sloan closed with, "We are all here for you", it shed light on how important that feeling is for anyone.
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- timmyswisschard
- Aug 18, 2006
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