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MP with anorexic past gives DNA to establish genetic links in sufferers

Brooks Newmark revealed in the Commons last year that at 17 he stopped eating for six months

Rosamund Urwin
Saturday 19 July 2014 22:25 BST
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Brooks Newmark, Braintree MP has donated his DNA to a scientific project
Brooks Newmark, Braintree MP has donated his DNA to a scientific project (Getty)

A Conservative MP who suffered from an eating disorder as a teenager has donated his DNA to a pioneering study looking for genetic links between anorexics.

Brooks Newmark, Braintree MP and newly appointed minister for Civil Society, gave a blood sample yesterday at the House of Commons. He is supporting the work of Charlotte's Helix – a UK organisation that has joined in the global AN25K project led by the US-based Anorexia Nervosa Genetics Initiative. This seeks 25,000 DNA samples from sufferers. Samples from the UK will be processed at King's College London. "Establishing specific genetic links will be a major step forward," said Erica Husain, chair of Charlotte's Helix.

Mr Newmark revealed in the Commons last year that at 17 he stopped eating for six months. He could not even swallow a pea. "I know a lot of people [see] anorexia as a body-image problem, but it's more feeling a lack of control," he said. He "self-recovered" after going to study in the US: "I could reinvent my life – that helped me."

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