Kath Courts has been living with anorexia nervosa since she was 18.
Over the past eight years the 27-year-old has received hospital treatment and undergone various therapies for the life-threatening illness, and she’s currently in recovery.
Kath says one of the greatest sources of support has been The Butterfly Foundation, a government-funded organisation dedicated to helping people with eating disorders recover from, and survive, their illness.
“The fact that I’m still alive, to be honest, comes down to support I’ve had. The Butterfly Foundation support line has been one of those supports for me,” she tells Mamamia.
The helpline assists more than 1000 eating disorder sufferers each month, providing them with an hour of phone and web-based counselling.
Kath Courts. (Images supplied)
Despite the crucial role The Butterfly Foundation plays — and the fact it's the only eating disorder-dedicated support service in Australia — it could lose its funding next year under the Federal Department of Health's restructuring of online mental health services, which seeks to develop a centralised "portal".
CEO Christine Morgan has told the ABC the organisation only has 12 months of certain funding; after that, its fate lies in the balance.
Considering almost one million Australians live with anorexia, bulimia, binge eating disorder and eating disorders not otherwise specified, and have mortality rates twice that of the general population, this move could have widespread consequences.