A nurse who was once just weeks from death after suffering from anorexia has turned her life around - and is now poised to complete the London Marathon.
Harriet Smith, 26, has struggled with the eating disorder for 12 years and at her lowest point weighed just five stone.
But now the 5ft 8" runner has got her life back on track - in more ways than one.
With the help of her family and a specialist eating disorder clinic she is now a healthy 9st 7lbs. She is also in training to run a marathon for an animal charity and hopes her story can provide inspiration of others recovering from eating disorders.
She said that when she was ill she ran with the prime purpose of losing weight but now she runs simply because she enjoys it.
'I never thought I'd come this far,' she told the Daily Mirror.
'This is the more complete I've ever felt. I hope my story can inspire other people suffering from eating disorders. It takes time but you can recover.'
Harriet started to lose weight when she was just 14 after a healthy eating kick 'got out of hand.'
Before long she had lost four stone in just a few years with devastating health consequences. Her periods stopped, she felt tired and frail and grew a fine layer of hair over her body.
Harriet said she was in denial even after she was admitted to hospital.
'The doctor said I was weeks from death. He said my heart would just stop beating,' she recalled.
Her Body Mass Index was just 10 - someone with a BMI of below 18.5 is considered underweight.
She was sectioned under the Mental Health Act in July 2005 and spent a year in a specialist eating disorder clinic. Harriet was fed through a tube and kept under watch and gradually gained weight.
She said her mother Joanne, 63, father Graeme, 55 and two brothers gave her a huge amount of support and encouragement to overcome the psychological disorder.
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