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January 06, 2011

Prescription Drug Abuse in the Workplace


Illicit drugs and misuse of alcohol are not the only substances that can affect health and safety in workplaces. Prescription drugs, when used without a prescription and without the supervision of a doctor, can also have adverse effects. Workers can become sleepy or anxious or depressed or confused, from the improper use of prescription drugs. As important, when these drugs are used improperly, they can pose risks to employees, their coworkers, and the overall workplace itself. The risks associated with nonmedical use of prescription drugs in workplaces can escalate when workers’ jobs require caution and safety to prevent injury, such as those of transportation workers, assembly line workers, construction workers, nuclear-power plant workers, and the like. Social Worker Continuing Education

What Is Prescription Drug Abuse?
Prescription drug abuse has been identified as a growing problem in American workplaces. In the National Survey on Drug Use and Health (NSDUH), SAMHSA defines prescription drug abuse as the use of prescription pain relievers, tranquilizers, stimulants, or sedatives without a prescription of the respondent’s own or simply for the experience or feeling the drug causes. This definition covers a wide range of behaviors, from misusing prescription medications to get high, stay awake, or get to sleep to using someone else’s medication to address a legitimate medical need. What may seem like a harmless sharing of medications can lead to addiction, misdiagnosis of illnesses, life-threatening circumstances, and death.

Are Prescription Drugs Safe?
Prescription drugs are safe when they are taken as directed under a doctor’s orders. Fear of addiction and dependence should not stop an individual from taking medications that can help treat his or her problems, nor prevent a physician from prescribing appropriate medications. Proper usage of prescription drugs can help workers protect their health and thus perform more productively in the workplace. However, when taken for nonmedical or recreational purposes, prescription drugs are no safer than illicit or street drugs. The misconception of prescription drugs as legal and “safe,” even when abused, is particularly strong among young adults.

Most prescription drug abusers obtain their drugs free from a friend or relative. In 2006, 55.7 percent of individuals 12 and older who had used pain relievers nonmedically in the previous 12 months said they got their drugs this way.2 Other ways of acquiring prescription drugs include “doctor shopping” to get multiple prescriptions, taking them from a friend or relative, or buying them from a friend, relative, or dealer. It appears that the Internet is not a significant source of prescription drugs, such as opioid analgesics, for most users.

Prescription Drug Abuse Is a Growing Problem
Multiple sources of data make it clear that this problem is a growing one, especially for teens and young adults, which means that employers need to be aware of the problem. Data from the Treatment Episode Data Set show that admissions for treatment
of prescription and over-the-counter (OTC) drug abuse rose from 3 percent of all admissions in 1999 to 4 percent in 2002. The escalation seems to come from
increased rates of abuse of narcotic painkillers, which more than doubled between 1992 and 2002. As of 2003, 3 percent of admissions were for abuse of nonheroin opiates. According to the Drug Abuse Prescription drugs are safe when taken as directed under a doctor’s orders and as dispensed.

January 05, 2011

Tips in a Time of Economic Crisis.


Tips in a Time of Economic Crisis.

Many Americans report heightened levels of stress during this time of financial crisis. Yet, few realize that this reaction to economic pressures closely resembles the psychological effects experienced after natural disasters such as hurricanes, floods, wildfires, or even the terrorist attacks of 9/11. Stress reduction and mental health promotion are as important now for people affected directly or indirectly by the financial crisis as for those who suffered from effects of natural or man-made disasters.You Should Know While we try to shield our children from financial problems and the economic crisis, they hear, see, and read about what is happening in the world, the nation, and in their own homes. Despite our best efforts as adults, our worries can become their worries. Our stress can become their stress. Part of our responsibility as parents or guardians is to help our children deal with the stress that they lack the understanding or ability to manage on their own. MFT Continuing Education

Signs of Stress in the Young
Children respond to stress in many different ways. However, because certain signs are common at particular ages, adults can recognize when children are under stress and respond appropriately. Children respond to stress based on both their developmental level and their perception of family reactions. Often, the most significant indicator of stress is a change in a child’s behavior, not the behavior itself. Ages 1 to 5: With few coping skills, very young children have a hard time adjusting to change and loss. They must depend on parents, family members, and teachers to help them through difficult times. Very young children often regress to an earlier behavioral stage when under stress. Preschoolers may resume thumb sucking or bed wetting. They may cling to a parent or become very attached to a place where they feel safe. Changes in eating or sleeping habits, hyperactivity, or unusually aggressive or withdrawn behavior may indicate the presence of stress in young children.School-age Children: Those aged 5 to 11 may react to stress in many of the same ways as their younger counterparts. Signs can include regression to behaviors from earlier ages. They also may withdraw from friends, demand more attention from parents, act aggressively, or find it hard to concentrate. Some may complain of physical problems—headache or stomachache—without obvious cause. Adolescents: When under stress, youth in the 12 to 14 age range often have vague physical complaints. They also may abandon schoolwork, chores, and other responsibilities. Many withdraw, resist authority, become disruptive, or begin to experiment with alcohol or drugs. In later adolescence, teens may experience feelings of helplessness and guilt because they are unable to assume full adult responsibilities or to contribute to solving the causes of the family stress. Older teens may also deny the extent of their emotional reactions.How To Help Reassurance is key to helping children cope with stress. To the extent possible, maintain a normal household routine; encourage children to participate in activities at home and in the neighborhood. Very young children need a lot of cuddling and verbal support. Take the cue from older children about hugs and holding hands. But whatever their age, be honest; answer questions with age-appropriate responses and understandable information, whether it’s about scaling back a birthday party or finding ways to pay for college in a year or two. Listen and respond. Talk with, not to, them. Don’t let financial or job issues take over family time. Don’t dwell on details that may frighten a child or unduly upset a teen. Be frank and encourage children and teens to express their feelings in conversation, drawing, writing, or painting. Help them understand that their emotions are healthy and normal. Gently correct any misunderstandings they may have about their situations. Don’t forget to take steps to safeguard your own health. Model healthy stress-relieving behaviors and be proactive about managing your family’s stress. Finally, if stress levels in the family become overwhelming, it’s not a sign of weakness or failure to seek outside help for one or more family members.“Reassurance is key to helping children cope with stress. To the extent possible, maintain a normal household routine; encourage children to participate in activities at home and in the neighborhood.”
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Helpful ResourcesSAMHSA’s Health Information Network Toll-free: 1-877-SAMHSA-7 (1-877-726-4727) (English and Español)Web site: http://www.samhsa.gov/shinTreatment LocatorsMental Health Services LocatorToll-free: 800-789-2647 (English and Español)Web site: http://mentalhealth.samhsa.gov/databasesSubstance Abuse Treatment Facility LocatorToll-free: 800-662-HELP (4357) (24/7 English and Español)Web site: http://www.findtreatment.samhsa.govHotlinesNational Suicide Prevention LifelineToll-free: 800-273-TALK (8255)TTY: 800-799-4TTY (4889)Web site: http://www.suicidepreventionlifeline.orgOther ResourcesNational Child Traumatic Stress NetworkWeb site: http://www.nctsn.orgNational Association of School PsychologistsPhone: (301) 657-0270Toll-free: 866-331-NASPWeb site: http://www.nasponline.org/NEATAmerican Academy of Child and Adolescent PsychiatristsPhone: (202) 966-7300Web site: http://www.aacap.orgNote: This list is not exhaustive. Inclusion does not imply endorsement by the Center for Mental Health Services, the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration, or the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services.Family Talk About Economic Stress • Become a family “team” that works together to solve problems. • Have family meetings to talk about money concerns.• Include all children in family decisions, even if they don’t really understand. Just being there is important for them.• Help children learn about budgeting and the difference between needs (“must haves” like food and housing) and wants(“nice to haves” such as DVDs or a new toy).• Talk about a team approach to saving money and identify ways that everyone can help the family cut expenses. Even young children can help and feel useful by doing such things as remembering to turn off lights. • Identify and plan no-cost activities together: take a family walk, play a board game, or go on a bike ride together.
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January 04, 2011

Cognitive Behavioral Therapy for Eating Disorders


Psychiatr Clin North Am. 2010 September; 33(3): 611–627.
doi: 10.1016/j.psc.2010.04.004. PMCID: PMC2928448

Cognitive Behavioral Therapy for Eating Disorders
Rebecca Murphy, Suzanne Straebler, Zafra Cooper, and Christopher G. Fairburn
Department of Psychiatry, Warneford Hospital, Warneford Lane, Oxford University, Oxford OX3 7JX, UK
redistributed and reused, subject to certain conditions.
This document was posted here by permission of the publisher. At the time of the deposit, it included all changes made during peer review, copy editing, and publishing. The U. S. National Library of Medicine is responsible for all links within the document and for incorporating any publisher-supplied amendments or retractions issued subsequently. The published journal article, guaranteed to be such by Elsevier, is available for free, on ScienceDirect, at: http://dx.crossref.org/10.1016/j.psc.2010.04.004AbstractCognitive behavioral therapy (CBT) is the leading evidence-based treatment for bulimia nervosa. A new “enhanced” version of the treatment appears to be more potent and has the added advantage of being suitable for all eating disorders, including anorexia nervosa and eating disorder not otherwise specified. This article reviews the evidence supporting CBT in the treatment of eating disorders and provides an account of the “transdiagnostic” theory that underpins the enhanced form of the treatment. It ends with an outline of the treatment's main strategies and procedures.Keywords: Cognitive behavioral therapy, Eating disorders, Anorexia nervosa, Bulimia nervosa Other Sections▼
AbstractEating disorders and their clinical featuresThe empirical status of cognitive behavioral therapy for eating disordersThe cognitive behavioral account of eating disordersEnhanced cognitive behavioral therapyAn overview of the core aspects of treatmentPreparation for treatment and changeStage oneStage twoStage threeStage fourUnderweight patientsFinal commentsReferences The eating disorders provide one of the strongest indications for cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT). Two considerations support this claim. First, the core psychopathology of eating disorders, the overevaluation of shape and weight, is cognitive in nature. Second, it is widely accepted that CBT is the treatment of choice for bulimia nervosa1 and there is evidence that it is as effective with cases of “eating disorder not otherwise specified” (eating disorder NOS),2 the most common eating disorder diagnosis. This article starts with a description of the clinical features of eating disorders and then reviews the evidence supporting cognitive behavioral treatment. Next, the cognitive behavioral account of eating disorders is presented and, last, the new “transdiagnostic” form of CBT is described. Other Sections▼
AbstractEating disorders and their clinical featuresThe empirical status of cognitive behavioral therapy for eating disordersThe cognitive behavioral account of eating disordersEnhanced cognitive behavioral therapyAn overview of the core aspects of treatmentPreparation for treatment and changeStage oneStage twoStage threeStage fourUnderweight patientsFinal commentsReferencesEating disorders and their clinical featuresClassification and Diagnosis
Eating disorders are characterized by a severe and persistent disturbance in eating behavior that causes psychosocial and, sometimes, physical impairment. The DSM-IV classification scheme for eating disorders recognizes 2 specific diagnoses, anorexia nervosa (AN) and bulimia nervosa (BN), and a residual category termed eating disorder NOS.3The diagnosis of anorexia nervosa is made in the presence of the following features:
1. The overevaluation of shape and weight; that is, judging self-worth largely, or even exclusively, in terms of shape and weight. This has been described in various ways and is often expressed as strong desire to be thin combined with an intense fear of weight gain and fatness.
2. The active maintenance of an unduly low body weight. This is commonly defined as maintaining a body weight less than 85% of that expected or a body mass index (BMI; weight kg/height m2 or weight lb/[height in]2 × 703) of 17.5 or less.
3. Amenorrhea, in postpubertal females not taking an oral contraceptive.
The unduly low weight is pursued in a variety of ways with strict dieting and excessive exercise being particularly prominent. A subgroup also engages in episodes of binge eating and/or “purging” through self-induced vomiting or laxative misuse.For a diagnosis of bulimia nervosa 3 features need to be present:
1. Overevaluation of shape and weight, as in anorexia nervosa.
2. Recurrent binge eating. A “binge” is an episode of eating during which an objectively large amount of food is eaten for the circumstances and there is an accompanying sense of loss of control.
3. Extreme weight-control behavior, such as recurrent self-induced vomiting, regular laxative misuse, or marked dietary restriction.
In addition, the diagnostic criteria for anorexia nervosa should not be met. This “trumping rule” ensures that patients do not receive both diagnoses at one time.There are no positive criteria for the diagnosis of eating disorder NOS. Instead, this diagnosis is reserved for eating disorders of clinical severity that do not meet the diagnostic criteria of AN or BN. Eating disorder NOS is the most common eating disorder encountered in clinical settings constituting about half of adult outpatient eating-disordered samples, with patients with bulimia nervosa constituting about a third, and the rest being cases of anorexia nervosa.4 In inpatient settings the great majority of cases are either underweight forms of eating disorder NOS or anorexia nervosa.5In addition, DSM-IV recognizes “binge eating disorder” (BED) as a provisional diagnosis in need of further study. The criteria for BED are recurrent episodes of binge eating in the absence of extreme weight-control behavior. It is proposed that BED be recognized as a specific eating disorder in DSM-V.6Clinical Features
Anorexia nervosa, bulimia nervosa, and most cases of eating disorder NOS share a core psychopathology: the overevaluation of the importance of shape and weight and their control. Whereas most people judge themselves on the basis of their perceived performance in a variety of domains of life (such as the quality of their relationships, their work performance, their sporting prowess), for people with eating disorders self-worth is dependent largely, or even exclusively, on their shape and weight and their ability to control them. This psychopathology is peculiar to the eating disorders (and to body dysmorphic disorder).In anorexia nervosa, patients become underweight largely as a result of persistent and severe restriction of both the amount and the type of food that they eat. In addition to strict dietary rules, some patients engage in a driven form of exercising, which further contributes to their low body weight. Patients with anorexia nervosa typically value the sense of control that they derive from undereating. Some practice self-induced vomiting, laxative and/or diuretic misuse, especially (but not exclusively) those who experience episodes of loss of control over eating. The amount of food eaten during these “binges” is often not objectively large; hence, they are described as “subjective binges.” Many other psychopathological features tend to be present, some as a result of the semistarvation. These include depressed and labile mood, anxiety features, irritability, impaired concentration, loss of libido, heightened obsessionality and sometimes frank obsessional features, and social withdrawal. There are also a multitude of physical features, most of which are secondary to being underweight. These include poor sleep, sensitivity to the cold, heightened fullness, and decreased energy.Patients with bulimia nervosa resemble those with anorexia nervosa both in terms of their eating habits and methods of weight control. The main feature distinguishing these 2 groups is that in patients with bulimia nervosa attempts to restrict food intake are regularly disrupted by episodes of (objective) binge eating. These episodes are often followed by compensatory self-induced vomiting or laxative misuse, although there is also a subgroup of patients who do not purge (nonpurging bulimia nervosa). As a result of the combination of undereating and overeating the weight of most patients with bulimia nervosa tends to be unremarkable and is within the healthy range, BMI = 20–25. Features of depression and anxiety are prominent in these patients. Certain of these patients engage in self-harm and/or substance and alcohol misuse and may attract the diagnosis of borderline personality disorder. Most have few physical complaints, although electrolyte disturbance may occur in those who vomit or take laxatives or diuretics frequently.The clinical features of patients with eating disorder NOS closely resemble those seen in anorexia nervosa and bulimia nervosa and are of comparable duration and severity.7 Within this diagnostic grouping 3 subgroups may be distinguished, although there are no sharp boundaries among them. The first group consists of cases that closely resemble anorexia nervosa or bulimia nervosa but just fail to meet the threshold set by the diagnostic criteria (eg, binge eating may not be frequent enough to meet criteria for BN or weight may be just above the threshold in AN); the second and largest subgroup comprises cases in which the features of AN and BN occur in different combinations from that seen in the prototypic disorders—these states may be best viewed as “mixed” in character—and the third subgroup comprises those with binge-eating disorder. Most patients with binge-eating disorder are overweight (BMI = 25–30) or meet criteria for obesity (BMI ≥ 30). Other Sections▼
AbstractEating disorders and their clinical featuresThe empirical status of cognitive behavioral therapy for eating disordersThe cognitive behavioral account of eating disordersEnhanced cognitive behavioral therapyAn overview of the core aspects of treatmentPreparation for treatment and changeStage oneStage twoStage threeStage fourUnderweight patientsFinal commentsReferencesThe empirical status of cognitive behavioral therapy for eating disordersConsistent with the current way of classifying eating disorders, the research on their treatment has focused on the particular disorders in isolation. Wilson and colleagues8 have provided a narrative review of the studies of the treatment of the 2 specific eating disorders as well as eating disorder NOS, and an authoritative meta-analysis has been conducted by the UK National Institute for Health and Clinical Excellence (NICE).1 This systematic review is particularly rigorous and, as with all NICE reviews, it forms the basis for evidence-based guidelines for clinical management.The conclusion from the NICE review, and 2 other recent systematic reviews,9,10 is that cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT-BN) is the clear leading treatment for bulimia nervosa in adults. However, this is not to imply that CBT-BN is a panacea, as the original version of the treatment resulted in only fewer than half of the patients who completed treatment making a full and lasting recovery.8 The new “enhanced” version of the treatment (CBT-E) appears to be more effective.2Interpersonal psychotherapy (IPT) is a potential evidence-based alternative to CBT-BN in patients with bulimia nervosa and it involves a similar amount of therapeutic contact, but there have been fewer studies of it.11,12 IPT takes 8 to 12 months longer than CBT-BN to achieve a comparable effect. Antidepressant medication (eg, fluoxetine at a dose of 60 mg daily) has also been found to have a beneficial effect on binge eating in bulimia nervosa but not as great as that obtained with CBT-BN and the long-term effects remain largely untested.13 Combining CBT-BN with antidepressant medication does not appear to offer any clear advantage over CBT-BN alone.13 The treatment of adolescents with bulimia nervosa has received relatively little research attention to date.There has been much less research on the treatment of anorexia nervosa. Most of the studies suffer from small sample sizes and some from high rates of attrition. As a result, there is little evidence to support any psychological treatment, at least in adults. In adolescents the research has focused mainly on family therapy, with the result that the status of CBT in younger patients is unclear.Preliminary findings have been reported from a 3-site study of the use of the enhanced form of CBT (CBT-E) to treat outpatients with anorexia nervosa.14 This is the largest study of the treatment of anorexia nervosa to date. In brief, it appears that the treatment can be used to treat about 60% of outpatients with the disorder (BMI 15.0 to 17.5) and that in these patients about 60% have a good outcome. Interestingly and importantly the relapse rate appears low.There is a growing body of research on the treatment of binge-eating disorder. This research has been the subject of a recent narrative review15 and several systematic reviews.1,16,17 The strongest support is for a form of CBT similar to that used to treat BN (CBT-BED). This treatment has been found to have a sustained and marked effect on binge eating, but it has little effect on body weight, which is typically raised in these patients. Arguably the leading first-line treatment is a form of guided cognitive behavioral self-help as it is relatively simple to administer and reasonably effective.18Until recently, there had been almost no research on the treatment of forms of eating disorder NOS other than binge-eating disorder despite their severity and prevalence.7 However, recently the first randomized controlled trial of the enhanced form of CBT found that CBT-E was as effective for patients with eating disorder NOS (who were not significantly underweight; BMI >17.5) as it was for patients with bulimia nervosa with two-thirds of those who completed treatment having a good outcome.2In summary, CBT is the treatment of choice for bulimia nervosa and for binge-eating disorder with the best results being obtained with the new “enhanced” form of the treatment. Recent research provides support for the use of this treatment with patients with eating disorder NOS and those with anorexia nervosa.The remainder of this article provides a description of this transdiagnostic form of CBT. Other Sections▼
AbstractEating disorders and their clinical featuresThe empirical status of cognitive behavioral therapy for eating disordersThe cognitive behavioral account of eating disordersEnhanced cognitive behavioral therapyAn overview of the core aspects of treatmentPreparation for treatment and changeStage oneStage twoStage threeStage fourUnderweight patientsFinal commentsReferencesThe cognitive behavioral account of eating disordersAlthough the DSM-IV classification of eating disorders encourages the view that they are distinct conditions, each requiring their own form of treatment, there are reasons to question this view. Indeed, it has recently been pointed out that what is most striking about the eating disorders is not what distinguishes them but how much they have in common.19 As noted earlier, they share many clinical features, including the characteristic core psychopathology of eating disorders: the overevaluation of the importance of shape and weight. In addition, longitudinal studies indicate that most patients migrate among diagnoses over time.20 This temporal movement among diagnostic categories, together with the shared psychopathology, has led to the proposal that there may be limited utility in distinguishing among the disorders19 and furthermore that common “transdiagnostic” mechanisms may be involved in their maintenance.The transdiagnostic cognitive behavioral account of the eating disorders19 extends the original theory of bulimia nervosa21 to all eating disorders. According to this theory, the overevaluation of shape and weight and their control is central to the maintenance of all eating disorders. Most of the other clinical features can be understood as resulting directly from this psychopathology. It results in dietary restraint and restriction; preoccupation with thoughts about food and eating, weight and shape; the repeated checking of body shape and weight or its avoidance; and the engaging in extreme methods of weight control. The one feature that is not a direct expression of the core psychopathology is binge eating. This occurs in all cases of bulimia nervosa, many cases of eating disorder NOS, and some cases of anorexia nervosa. The cognitive behavioral account proposes that such episodes are largely the result of attempts to adhere to multiple extreme, and highly specific, dietary rules. The repeated breaking of these rules is almost inevitable and patients tend to react negatively to such dietary slips, generally viewing them as evidence of their poor self-control. They typically respond by temporarily abandoning their efforts to restrict their eating with binge eating being the result. This in turn maintains the core psychopathology by intensifying patients' concerns about their ability to control their eating, shape, and weight. It also encourages more dietary restraint, thereby increasing the risk of further binge eating.Three further processes may also maintain binge eating. First, difficulties in the patient's life and associated mood changes make it difficult to maintain dietary restraint. Second, as binge eating temporarily alleviates negative mood states and distracts patients from their difficulties, it can become a way of coping with such problems. Third, in patients who engage in compensatory purging, the mistaken belief in the effectiveness of vomiting and laxative misuse as a means of weight control results in a major deterrent against binge eating being removed.In patients who are underweight, the physiological and psychological consequences may also contribute to the maintenance of the eating disorder. For example, delayed gastric emptying leads to feelings of fullness even after patients have eaten only modest amounts of food. In addition, the social withdrawal and loss of previous interests prevent patients from being exposed to experiences that might diminish the importance they place on shape and weight.The composite “transdiagnostic” formulation is shown in Fig. 1. This illustrates the core processes that are hypothesized to maintain the full range of eating disorders. When applied to individual patients, its precise form will depend on the psychopathology present. In some patients, most of the processes are in operation (for example, in cases of anorexia nervosa binge-purge subtype) but in others only a few are active (for example, in binge-eating disorder). Thus, for each patient the formulation is driven by their individual psychopathology rather than their DSM diagnosis. As such, the formulation provides a guide to those processes that need to be addressed in treatment. Fig. 1
The composite “transdiagnostic” cognitive behavioral formulation.

Fig. 1The composite “transdiagnostic” cognitive behavioral formulation. Other Sections▼
AbstractEating disorders and their clinical featuresThe empirical status of cognitive behavioral therapy for eating disordersThe cognitive behavioral account of eating disordersEnhanced cognitive behavioral therapyAn overview of the core aspects of treatmentPreparation for treatment and changeStage oneStage twoStage threeStage fourUnderweight patientsFinal commentsReferencesEnhanced cognitive behavioral therapy“Enhanced” cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT-E) is based on the transdiagnostic theory outlined earlier and was derived from CBT-BN. It is designed to treat eating disorder psychopathology rather than an eating disorder diagnosis, with its exact form in any particular case depending on an individualized formulation of the processes maintaining the disorder. CBT-E is designed to be delivered on an individual basis to adult patients with any eating disorder of clinical severity who are appropriate to treat on an outpatient basis. It is described as “enhanced” because it uses a variety of new strategies and procedures to improve outcome and because it includes modules to address certain obstacles to change that are “external” to the core eating disorder, namely clinical perfectionism, low self-esteem, and interpersonal difficulties.There are 2 forms of CBT-E. The first is the “focused” form (CBT-Ef) that exclusively addresses eating disorder psychopathology. Current evidence suggests that this form should be viewed as the “default” version, as it is optimal for most patients with eating disorders.2 The second, a broad form of the treatment (CBT-Eb), addresses external obstacles to change, in addition to the core eating disorder psychopathology. Preliminary evidence suggests that this more complex form of CBT-E should be reserved for patients in whom clinical perfectionism, core low self-esteem, or interpersonal difficulties are pronounced and maintaining the eating disorder.2There are also 2 intensities of CBT-E. With patients who are not significantly underweight (BMI above 17.5), it consists of 20 sessions over 20 weeks. This version is suitable for the great majority of adult outpatients. For patients who have a BMI below 17.5, a commonly used threshold for anorexia nervosa, treatment involves 40 sessions over 40 weeks. The additional sessions and treatment duration are designed to allow sufficient time for 3 additional clinical features to be addressed, namely, limited motivation to change, undereating, and being underweight.In addition CBT-E has been adapted for younger patients22 and for inpatient and day patient settings treatment.23,24 Limitations on space preclude a description of these other forms of CBT-E. Further details of these adaptations of CBT-E, together with a comprehensive account of the treatment and its implementation, can be found in the main treatment guide.25 Other Sections▼
AbstractEating disorders and their clinical featuresThe empirical status of cognitive behavioral therapy for eating disordersThe cognitive behavioral account of eating disordersEnhanced cognitive behavioral therapyAn overview of the core aspects of treatmentPreparation for treatment and changeStage oneStage twoStage threeStage fourUnderweight patientsFinal commentsReferencesAn overview of the core aspects of treatmentCBT-E is a form of cognitive behavioral therapy and in common with other empirically supported forms of CBT it focuses primarily on the maintaining processes, in this case those maintaining the eating disorder psychopathology. It uses specified strategies and a flexible series of sequenced therapeutic procedures to achieve both cognitive and behavioral changes. The style of treatment is similar to other forms of CBT, that of collaborative empiricism. Although CBT-E uses a variety of generic cognitive and behavioral interventions (such as addressing cognitive biases), unlike some forms of CBT, it favors the use of strategic changes in behavior to modify thinking rather than direct cognitive restructuring. The eating disorder psychopathology may be likened to a house of cards with the strategy being to identify and remove the key cards that are supporting the eating disorder, thereby bringing down the entire house. Following, we summarize the core features of the focused and broad versions of CBT-E, including adaptations that need to be made for patients who are underweight. The treatment has 4 defined stages. Other Sections▼
AbstractEating disorders and their clinical featuresThe empirical status of cognitive behavioral therapy for eating disordersThe cognitive behavioral account of eating disordersEnhanced cognitive behavioral therapyAn overview of the core aspects of treatmentPreparation for treatment and changeStage oneStage twoStage threeStage fourUnderweight patientsFinal commentsReferencesPreparation for treatment and changeAn evaluation interview assessing the nature and extent of the patient's psychiatric problems is conducted before starting treatment.26 This interview usually takes place over 2 or more appointments. The assessment process is collaborative and designed to put the patient at ease and begin to engage the patient in treatment and in change. Information from the assessment informs how best to proceed and, in particular, whether CBT-E is appropriate. If CBT-E is deemed to be appropriate, the main aspects of the therapy are described and patients are encouraged to make the most of the opportunity to overcome their eating disorder.It is important that from the outset of CBT-E the patient is in a position to make optimum use of treatment. For this reason any potential barriers to benefiting from CBT-E should be explored. Important contraindications to beginning treatment immediately are physical features of concern, the presence of severe clinical depression, significant substance abuse, major distracting life events or crises, and competing commitments. Such factors should be addressed first before embarking on treatment. Other Sections▼
AbstractEating disorders and their clinical featuresThe empirical status of cognitive behavioral therapy for eating disordersThe cognitive behavioral account of eating disordersEnhanced cognitive behavioral therapyAn overview of the core aspects of treatmentPreparation for treatment and changeStage oneStage twoStage threeStage fourUnderweight patientsFinal commentsReferencesStage oneIt is crucial that treatment starts well. This is consistent with evidence that the magnitude of change achieved early in treatment is a good predictor of treatment outcome.27,28 This initial intensive stage, designed to achieve initial therapeutic momentum, involves approximately 8 sessions held twice weekly over 4 weeks. The aims of this first stage are to engage the patient in treatment and change, to derive a personalized formulation (case conceptualization) with the patient, to provide education about treatment and the disorder, and to introduce and implement 2 important procedures: collaborative “weekly weighing” and “regular eating.” The changes made in this first stage of treatment form the foundation on which other changes are built.Engaging the Patient in Treatment and Change
Many patients with eating disorders are ambivalent about treatment and change. Getting patients “on board” with treatment is a necessary first step. Engagement can be enhanced by conducting the assessment of the eating disorder in a way that helps the patient to become involved in, and hopeful about, the possibility of change and encourages the patient to take “ownership” of treatment.Jointly Creating the Formulation
This is usually done in the first treatment session and is a personalized visual representation of the processes that appear to be maintaining the eating problem. The therapist draws out the relevant sections of Fig. 1 in collaboration with the patient, incorporating the patient's own experiences and words. It is usually best to start with something the patient wishes to change (eg, binge eating). The formulation helps patients to realize both that their behavior is comprehensible and that it is maintained by a series of interacting self-perpetuating mechanisms that are open to change. It is explained that “the diagram” provides a guide to what needs to be targeted in treatment if patients are to achieve a full and lasting recovery. At this early stage in treatment the therapist should explain that it is provisional and may need to be modified as treatment progresses and understanding of the patient's eating problem increases.Establishing Real-time Self-monitoring
This is the ongoing “in-the-moment” recording of eating and other relevant behavior, thoughts, feelings, and events (Fig. 2 is an example of a monitoring record). Self-monitoring is introduced in the initial session and continues to occupy an essential and central role throughout most of treatment. Therapists should clearly explain the reasons for self-monitoring. First, that it enables further understanding of the eating problem and it identifies progress. Second, and more importantly, it helps patients to be more aware of what is happening in the moment so that they can begin to make changes to behavior that may have seemed automatic or beyond their control. Fundamental to establishing accurate recording is jointly reviewing the patient's records each session and discussing the process of recording and any difficulties with this. The records also help inform the agenda for the session: it is best to save any problems identified in the records for the main part of the session. Fig. 2
An example monitoring record.

Fig. 2An example monitoring record.Establishing Collaborative “Weekly Weighing”
The patient and therapist check the patient's weight once a week and plot it on an individualized weight graph. Patients are strongly encouraged not to weigh themselves at other times. Weekly in-session weighing has several purposes. First, it provides an opportunity for the therapist to educate patients about body weight and help patients to interpret the numbers on the scale, which otherwise they are prone to misinterpret. Second, it provides patients with accurate data about their weight at a time when their eating habits are changing. Third, and most importantly, it addresses the maintaining processes of excessive body weight checking or its avoidance.Providing Education
From session 1 onward, an important element of treatment is education about weight and eating, as many patients have misconceptions that maintain their eating disorder. Some of the main topics to cover are as follows:
• The characteristic features of eating disorders including their associated physical and psychosocial effects
• Body weight and its regulation: the body mass index and its interpretation; natural weight fluctuations; and the effects of treatment on weight
• Ineffectiveness of vomiting, laxatives, and diuretics as a means of weight control
• Adverse effects of dieting: the types of dieting that promote binge eating; dietary rules versus dietary guidelines.
To provide reliable information on these topics, patients are asked to read relevant sections from one of the authoritative books on eating disorders29,30 and their reading is discussed in subsequent treatment sessions.Establishing “Regular Eating”
Establishing a pattern of regular eating is fundamental to successful treatment whatever the form of the eating disorder. It addresses an important type of dieting (“delayed eating”); it displaces most episodes of binge eating; it structures people's days and, for underweight patients, it introduces meals and snacks that can be subsequently increased in size. Early in treatment (usually by the third session) patients are asked to eat 3 planned meals each day plus 2 or 3 planned snacks so that there is rarely more than a 4-hour interval between them. Patients are also asked to confine their eating to these meals and snacks. They should choose what they eat with the only condition being that the meals and snacks are not followed by any compensatory behavior (eg, self-induced vomiting or laxative misuse). The new eating pattern should take precedence over other activities but should not be so inflexible as to preclude the possibility of adjusting timings to suit the patients' commitments each day.Patients should be helped to adhere to their regular eating plan and to resist eating between the planned meals and snacks. Two rather different strategies may be used to achieve the latter goals. The first involves helping patients to identify activities that are incompatible with eating and likely to distract them from the urge to binge eat (eg, taking a brisk walk) and strategies that make binge eating less likely (eg, leaving the kitchen). The second is to help patients to recognize that the urge to binge eat is a temporary phenomenon that can be “surfed.” Some “residual binges” are likely to persist, however, and these are addressed later.Involving Significant Others
The treatment is primarily an individual treatment for adults. Despite this, “significant others” are seen if this is likely to facilitate treatment and the patient is willing for this to happen. There are 2 reasons for seeing others: if they could help the patient in making changes or if others are making it difficult for the patient to change, for example, by commenting adversely on eating or appearance. Other Sections▼
AbstractEating disorders and their clinical featuresThe empirical status of cognitive behavioral therapy for eating disordersThe cognitive behavioral account of eating disordersEnhanced cognitive behavioral therapyAn overview of the core aspects of treatmentPreparation for treatment and changeStage oneStage twoStage threeStage fourUnderweight patientsFinal commentsReferencesStage twoStage two is a brief, but essential, transitional stage that generally comprises 2 appointments, a week apart. While continuing with the procedures introduced in Stage one, the therapist and patient take stock and conduct a joint review of progress, the goal being to identify problems still to be addressed and any emerging barriers to change, to revise the formulation if necessary, and to design Stage three. The review serves several purposes. If patients are making good progress they should be praised for their efforts and helpful changes reinforced. If patients are not doing well, the explanation needs to be understood and addressed. If clinical perfectionism, core low self-esteem or relationship difficulties appear to be responsible, this would be an indication for implementing the broad version of the treatment. Other Sections▼
AbstractEating disorders and their clinical featuresThe empirical status of cognitive behavioral therapy for eating disordersThe cognitive behavioral account of eating disordersEnhanced cognitive behavioral therapyAn overview of the core aspects of treatmentPreparation for treatment and changeStage oneStage twoStage threeStage fourUnderweight patientsFinal commentsReferencesStage threeThis is the main body of treatment. Its aim is to address the key processes that are maintaining the patient's eating disorder. The mechanisms addressed, and the order in which these are tackled, depend upon their role and relative importance in maintaining the patient's psychopathology. There are generally 8 weekly appointments.Addressing the Overevaluation of Shape and Weight
Identifying the overevaluation and its consequences
The first step involves explaining the concept of self-evaluation and helping patients identify how they evaluate themselves. The relative importance of the various domains that are relevant may be represented as a pie chart (Fig. 3 is an example of a pie chart with extended formulation), which for most patients is dominated by a large slice representing shape and weight and controlling eating. Fig. 3
The overevaluation of shape and weight and their control: an extended formulation.

Fig. 3The overevaluation of shape and weight and their control: an extended formulation.
The patient and therapist then identify the problems inherent in this scheme for self-evaluation. Briefly there are 3 related problems: first, self-evaluation is overly dependent on performance in one area of life with the result that domains other than shape and weight are marginalized; second, the area of controlling shape and weight is one in which success is elusive, thus undermining self-esteem; and third, the overevaluation is responsible for the behavior that characterizes the eating disorder (dieting, binge eating, and so forth).31The final step in the consideration of self-evaluation is the creation of an “extended formulation” depicting the main expressions of the overevaluation of shape and weight: dieting, body checking and body avoidance, feeling fat, and marginalization of other areas of life. The therapist uses this extended formulation to explain how these behaviors and experiences serve to maintain and magnify the patient's concerns about shape and weight and thus they need to be addressed in treatment.Enhancing the importance of other domains for self-evaluation
An indirect, yet powerful, means of diminishing the overevaluation of shape and weight is helping patients increase the number and significance of other domains for self-evaluation. Engaging in other aspects of their life that may have been pushed aside by the eating disorder results in these other areas becoming more important in the patient's self-evaluation. Briefly, this involves identifying activities or areas of life that the patient would like to engage in and helping them do so.A second, direct, strategy is to target the behavioral expressions of the overevaluation of shape and weight. This is done at the same time as enhancing the other domains for self-evaluation and it involves tackling body checking, body avoidance, and feeling fat.Addressing body checking and avoidance
Patients are often not aware that they are engaging in body checking and that it is maintaining their body dissatisfaction. The first step is therefore to obtain detailed information about their checking behavior by asking patients to monitor it. Patients are then educated about the adverse effects of repeated body checking as the way in which they check tends to provide biased information that leads them to feel dissatisfied. For example, scrutinizing parts of one's body magnifies apparent defects, and only comparing oneself to thin and attractive people leads one to draw the conclusion that one is unattractive. Most patients need substantial and detailed help to curb their repeated body checking and invariably attention needs to be devoted to their mirror use.Patients who avoid seeing their bodies also need considerable help. They should be encouraged to progressively get used to the sight and feel of their body. This may take many successive sessions.Addressing “feeling fat”
“Feeling fat” is an experience reported by many women but the intensity and frequency of this feeling appears to be far greater among people with eating disorders. Feeling fat is a target for treatment because it tends to be equated with being fat (irrespective of the patient's actual shape and weight) and hence maintains body dissatisfaction. Although this topic has received little research attention, clinical observation suggests that feeling fat is a result of mislabeling certain emotions and bodily experiences. Consequently, patients are helped to identify the triggers of their feeling fat experiences and the accompanying feelings. These typically are negative mood states (eg, feeling bored or depressed) or physical sensations that heighten body awareness (eg, feeling full, bloated, or sweaty). Patients are then helped to view “feeling fat” as a cue to ask themselves what else they are feeling at the time and once recognized to address it directly.Exploring the origins of overevaluation
Toward the end of Stage three it is often helpful to explore the origins of the patient's sensitivity to shape, weight, and eating. A historical review can help to make sense of how the problem developed and evolved, highlight how it might have served a useful function in its early stages, and the fact that it may no longer do so. If a specific event appears to have played a critical role in the development of the eating problem, the patient should be helped to reappraise this from the vantage point of the present. This review helps patients distance themselves further from the eating disorder frame of mind or “mindset.”Addressing Dietary Rules
Patients are helped to recognize that their multiple extreme and rigid dietary rules impair their quality of life and are a central feature of the eating disorder. A major goal of treatment is therefore to reduce, if not eliminate altogether, dieting. The first step in doing so is to identify the patient's various dietary rules together with the beliefs that underlie them. The patient is then helped to break these rules to test the beliefs in question and to learn that the feared consequences that maintain the dietary rule (typically weight gain or binge eating) are not an inevitable result. With patients who binge eat, it is important to pay particular attention to “food avoidance” (the avoidance of specific foods) as this is a major contributory factor. These patients need to systematically re-introduce the avoided food into their diet.Addressing Event-related Changes in Eating
Among many patients with eating disorders, eating habits change in response to outside events and changes in their mood. The change may involve eating less, stopping eating altogether, overeating, or binge eating. If these changes are prominent, patients need help to deal directly with the triggers. Generally this may be achieved by training them in “proactive” problem solving coupled with the use of functional means of modulating mood.Addressing Clinical Perfectionism, Low Self-esteem, and Interpersonal Problems
As noted earlier, there are 2 main forms of CBT-E. The components of the focused version are described previously. The “broad” version also includes these strategies and procedures but, in addition, addresses one or more “external” (to the core eating disorder) processes that may be maintaining the eating disorder. It is designed for patients in whom clinical perfectionism, core low self-esteem, or marked interpersonal problems are pronounced and appear to be contributing to the eating disorder. If the therapist decides, in the review of progress (Stage two), to use one or more of these modules, they should become a major component of all subsequent sessions. In the original version of the broad form of CBT-E a fourth module, “mood intolerance,” was included but this has since been integrated in to the standard, focused, form of the treatment as part of addressing events and moods. A description of the main elements of the 3 modules follows. A more detailed account is available in the main treatment guide.32Addressing clinical perfectionism
The psychopathology of clinical perfectionism is similar to that of an eating disorder.33 Its core is the overevaluation of striving to achieve and achievement itself. People with clinical perfectionism judge themselves largely, or exclusively, in terms of working hard toward, and meeting, personally demanding standards in areas of life that they value. If they have a coexisting eating disorder such extreme standards are applied to their eating, weight, and shape. This intensifies key aspects of the eating disorder including dietary restraint, exercise, and shape checking. It is usually evident from the patient's behavior and it can interfere with important aspects of treatment, leading to, for example, overly detailed recording and a strong resistance to relaxing dietary restraint.The strategy for addressing clinical perfectionism mirrors that used to address the overevaluation of shape and weight and the two can be addressed more or less at the same time. The first step is to add perfectionism to the patient's formulation and to consider the consequences of this for the patient and his or her life, including the self-evaluation pie-chart. Patients are then encouraged to take steps to enhance the importance of other, nonperformance related, domains for self-evaluation.It is helpful to consider collaboratively patients' goals in areas of life that they value, which are usually multiple, rigid, and extreme, and whether these goals are in fact counterproductive and impairing their actual performance. Performance checking is addressed similarly to shape checking, beginning by first asking patients to record times when they are checking their performance. Then the therapist helps them appreciate that the data they obtain is likely to be skewed as a result of using biased assessment processes, such as selective attention to failure. Avoidance and procrastination also need to be addressed, as they interfere with patients being able to assess their true ability with the result that their fears of failure are maintained.Addressing core low self-esteem
People with core low self-esteem (CLSE) have a longstanding and pervasive negative view of themselves. It is largely independent of the person's actual performance in life (ie, it is unconditional) and is not secondary to the presence of the eating disorder. The presence of CLSE results in the individual striving especially hard to control eating, weight, and shape to retain some sense of self-worth. It is generally a barrier to engaging in treatment as patients do not feel they deserve treatment nor do they believe that they can benefit from it.If it is to be directly addressed in treatment, it is added to the patient's formulation in Stage two and tackled alongside, although slightly later than, the steps addressing the overevaluation of shape and weight. This involves educating patients about the role of CLSE in maintaining the eating disorder and contributing to other difficulties in their life. Patients are helped to identify and modify the main cognitive maintaining processes, including discounting positive qualities and the overgeneralization of apparent failures. Previous views of the self are reappraised, using both cognitive restructuring and behavioral experiments, to help patients to reach a more balanced view of their self-worth.Addressing interpersonal problems
Interpersonal problems are common among patients with eating disorders, although they generally improve as the eating disorder resolves. Such problems may include conflict with others and difficulties developing close relationships. If these problems, and the resulting effects on mood, directly influence the patient's eating, they may be addressed through the use of proactive problem solving and functional mood modulation and acceptance (as described earlier). However, in some cases interpersonal problems powerfully maintain the eating disorder through a variety of direct and indirect processes or they interfere with treatment itself. Under these circumstances, they need to become a focus of treatment in their own right.The strategy used in CBT-E is to use a different psychological treatment to achieve interpersonal change, namely Interpersonal Psychotherapy (IPT). This is an evidence-based treatment that helps patients identify and address current interpersonal problems. In style and content IPT is very different from CBT-E. For this reason it is not “integrated” with CBT-E as such: rather, each session has a CBT-E component and an IPT one. More detailed information about IPT and its use with patients with eating disorders is available in a recent book chapter.34 Other Sections▼
AbstractEating disorders and their clinical featuresThe empirical status of cognitive behavioral therapy for eating disordersThe cognitive behavioral account of eating disordersEnhanced cognitive behavioral therapyAn overview of the core aspects of treatmentPreparation for treatment and changeStage oneStage twoStage threeStage fourUnderweight patientsFinal commentsReferencesStage fourStage four, the final stage in treatment, is concerned with ending treatment well. The focus is on maintaining the progress that has already been made and reducing the risk of relapse. Typically there are 3 appointments about 2 weeks apart. During this stage, as part of their preparation for the ending of treatment, patients discontinue self-monitoring and begin weekly weighing at home.To maximize the chances that progress is maintained, the therapist and patient jointly devise a personalized plan for the following few months until a posttreatment review appointment (usually about 20 weeks later). Typically this includes further work on body checking, food avoidance, and perhaps further practice at problem solving. In addition, patients are encouraged to continue their efforts to develop new interests and activities.There are 2 elements to minimizing the risk of relapse. First, patients need to have realistic expectations regarding the future. Expecting never to experience any eating difficulties again makes patients vulnerable to relapse because it encourages a negative reaction to even minor setbacks. Instead, patients should view their eating problem as an Achilles heel. The goal is that patients identify setbacks as early as possible, view them as a “lapse” rather than a “relapse,” and actively address them using strategies that they learned during treatment. Other Sections▼
AbstractEating disorders and their clinical featuresThe empirical status of cognitive behavioral therapy for eating disordersThe cognitive behavioral account of eating disordersEnhanced cognitive behavioral therapyAn overview of the core aspects of treatmentPreparation for treatment and changeStage oneStage twoStage threeStage fourUnderweight patientsFinal commentsReferencesUnderweight patientsThe strategies and procedures described so far are also relevant to patients who are underweight (mostly cases of anorexia nervosa but some cases of eating disorder NOS). However, CBT-E has to be modified to address certain characteristics of these patients.The first priority is to address motivation, as often these patients do not view undereating or being underweight as a problem. This may be done in several ways and relies on a good therapeutic alliance. The patient is provided with a personalized education about the psychological and physical effects of being underweight. This helps them to understand that some of the things that they find difficult (eg, being obsessive and indecisive, being unable to be spontaneous, being socially avoidant, lacking sexual appetite) are a direct consequence of being a low weight rather than being a reflection of their true personality. The patient is helped to think through the advantages and disadvantages of change, including a consideration of how things are likely to be in the future if they choose not to change and how this would fit with their aspirations. The therapist shows intense interest in the patient as a person, beyond the eating disorder, and helps them to reflect on the state of all aspects of their life, including their relationships, their physical and psychological well-being, their work, and their personal values. The patient is encouraged to experiment with making changes to learn more about the pros and cons of their current behavior. The goal is for patients themselves to decide to regain weight rather than this decision being imposed by the therapist. If this is successful, it greatly assists subsequent weight regain.Second, the undereating and the consequent state of starvation must be addressed. It is important to help patients to realize that undereating, and being underweight maintain the eating disorder and this is illustrated in a personalized formulation. Once the patient has agreed to regain weight it is explained that weight regain should be gradual and steady and that they should aim to maintain an average energy surplus of 500 calories each day to regain an average of 0.5 kg (1.1 lb) per week. The therapist helps the patient to devise and implement a daily plan of eating (which may be supplemented by energy-rich drinks) that meets this target.Treatment needs to be extended from the typical 20 weeks to about 40 weeks to allow sufficient time for patients to decide to change, to reach a healthy weight, and then practice maintaining it. It can be helpful to involve others in the weight-gain process to facilitate the patient's own efforts. This is especially so with young patients who are living at home with their parents. Other Sections▼
AbstractEating disorders and their clinical featuresThe empirical status of cognitive behavioral therapy for eating disordersThe cognitive behavioral account of eating disordersEnhanced cognitive behavioral therapyAn overview of the core aspects of treatmentPreparation for treatment and changeStage oneStage twoStage threeStage fourUnderweight patientsFinal commentsReferencesFinal commentsHopefully it will be clear from this brief account of CBT for eating disorders that major advances have been made and are continuing to be made. Perhaps most prominent among these is the adoption of a transdiagnostic approach to treatment whereby treatment is no longer for a specific eating disorder (eg, bulimia nervosa) but is directed at eating disorder psychopathology and the processes that maintains it. As a result, an empirically supported treatment approach has evolved that is suitable for all forms of eating disorder and one that is highly individualized.Many challenges remain. First and foremost, treatment outcome needs to be further improved, especially in the case of patients who are substantially underweight. Second, understanding more about the way in which treatment works, and the active ingredients of treatment, could inform the design of a more potent version. Doubtless some elements could be discarded whereas others may need to be enhanced.35 We need treatments that are effective and efficient. Last, we need to facilitate the dissemination of evidence-based practice. Many patients receive suboptimal treatment. There are several possible reasons for this but prominent among them is the fact that few therapists have received the necessary training.FootnotesC.G.F. is supported by a Principal Research Fellowship from the Wellcome Trust (046386). R.M., S.S., and Z.C. are supported by a program grant from the Wellcome Trust (046386). Other Sections▼
AbstractEating disorders and their clinical featuresThe empirical status of cognitive behavioral therapy for eating disordersThe cognitive behavioral account of eating disordersEnhanced cognitive behavioral therapyAn overview of the core aspects of treatmentPreparation for treatment and changeStage oneStage twoStage threeStage fourUnderweight patientsFinal commentsReferencesReferences1. National Institute for Clinical Excellence (NICE) NICE; London: 2004. Eating disorders—core interventions in the treatment and management of anorexia nervosa, bulimia nervosa and related eating disorders.http://www.nice.org.uk Available at: Accessed October 2009. NICE Clinical Guidance No. 9.
2. Fairburn C.G., Cooper Z., Doll H.A. Transdiagnostic cognitive behavioral therapy for patients with eating disorders: a two-site trial with 60-week follow-up. Am J Psychiatry. 2009;166:311–319. [PubMed]
3. American Psychiatric Association 4th edition. American Psychiatric Association; Washington, DC: 1994. Diagnostic and statistical manual of mental disorders.
4. Fairburn C.G., Bohn K. Eating disorder NOS (EDNOS): an example of the troublesome “not otherwise specified” (NOS) category in DSM-IV. Behav Res Ther. 2005;43:691–701. [PMC free article] [PubMed]
5. Dalle Grave R., Calugi S. Eating disorder not otherwise specified on an inpatient unit. Eur Eat Disord Rev. 2007;15:340–349. [PubMed]
6. Miller G., Holden C. Proposed revisions to psychiatry's canon unveiled. Science. 2010;327(5967):770–771. [PubMed]
7. Fairburn C.G., Cooper Z., Bohn K. The severity and status of eating disorder NOS: implications for DSM-V. Behav Res Ther. 2007;45(8):1705–1715. [PMC free article] [PubMed]
8. Wilson G.T., Grilo C.M., Vitousek K.M. Psychological treatment of eating disorders. Am Psychol. 2007;62(3):199–216. [PubMed]
9. Shapiro J.R., Berkamn N.D., Brownley K.A. Bulimia nervosa treatment: a systematic review of randomized controlled trials. Int J Eat Disord. 2007;40(4):321–336. [PubMed]
10. Hay P.P.J., Bacaltchuk J., Stefano S. Psychological treatments for bulimia nervosa and binging. Cochrane Database Syst Rev. 2009;4 CD000562.
11. Fairburn C.G., Jones R., Peveler R.C. Psychotherapy and bulimia nervosa: the longer-term effects of interpersonal psychotherapy, behaviour therapy and cognitive behaviour therapy. Arch Gen Psychiatry. 1993;50:419–428. [PubMed]
12. Agras W.S., Walsh B.T., Fairburn C.G. A multicenter comparison of cognitive behavioral therapy and interpersonal psychotherapy for bulimia nervosa. Arch Gen Psychiatry. 2000;57:459–466. [PubMed]
13. Wilson G.T., Fairburn C.G. Treatments for eating disorders. In: Nathan P.E., Gorman J.M., editors. A guide to treatments that work. 3rd edition. Oxford University Press; New York: 2007. pp. 581–583.
14. Fairburn CG. Transdiagnostic CBT for eating disorders “CBT-E”, presented at association for behavioral and cognitive therapy. New York; 2009.
15. Mitchell J., Devlin M., de Zwaan M. Guilford; New York: 2008. Binge eating disorder. Clinical foundations and treatment. p. 65–9.
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21. Fairburn C.G., Cooper Z., Cooper P. The clinical features and maintenance of bulimia nervosa. In: Brownwell K.D., Foreyt J.P., editors. Physiology, psychology and treatment of eating disorders. Basic Books; New York: 1986. pp. 389–404.
22. Cooper Z., Stewart A. CBT-E and the younger patient. In: Fairburn C.G., editor. Cognitive behavior therapy and eating disorders. Guilford Press; New York: 2008. pp. 221–230.
23. Dalle Grave R., Bohn K., Hawker D. Inpatient, day patient, and two forms of outpatient CBT-E. In: Fairburn C.G., editor. Cognitive behavior therapy and eating disorders. Guilford Press; New York: 2008. pp. 231–244.
24. Dalle Grave R, Fairburn CG. Intensive CBT for eating disorders. New York: Guilford Press, in press.
25. Fairburn C.G. Guilford Press; New York: 2008. Cognitive behavior therapy and eating disorders.
26. Fairburn C.G., Cooper Z., Waller D. The patients: their assessment, preparation for treatment and medical management. In: Fairburn C.G., editor. Cognitive behavior therapy and eating disorders. Guilford Press; New York: 2008. pp. 35–40.
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Continuing Education for Social Workers

January 03, 2011

New Food-Addiction Link Found


Mere sight/smell of food spikes levels of brain “pleasure” chemical
UPTON, NY — Scientists at the U.S. Department of Energy’s Brookhaven National Laboratory have found that the mere display of food — where food-deprived subjects are allowed to smell and taste their favorite foods without actually eating them — causes a significant elevation in brain dopamine, a neurotransmitter associated with feelings of pleasure and reward. This activation of the brain’s dopamine motivation circuits is distinct from the role the brain chemical plays when people actually eat, and may be similar to what addicts experience when craving drugs. LCSW CEUs
“Eating is a highly reinforcing behavior, just like taking illicit drugs,” said psychiatrist Nora Volkow, the study’s lead investigator. “But this is the first time anyone has shown that the dopamine system can be triggered by food when there is no pleasure associated with it since the subjects don’t eat the food. This provides us with new clues about the mechanisms that lead people to eat other than just for the pleasure of eating, and in this respect may help us understand why some people overeat.” The study will appear in the June 1, 2002 issue of Synapse (now available online ).

Brookhaven scientists have done extensive research showing that addictive drugs increase the levels of dopamine in the brain, and that addicts have fewer dopamine receptors than non-addicts. Last year, in an effort to understand the relationship of the dopamine system to obesity, they found that obese individuals also had fewer dopamine receptors than normal control subjects.

In the new study, the scientists investigated the role of dopamine in food intake in healthy, non-obese individuals. The researchers used positron emission tomography (PET), a brain-scanning technique, to measure dopamine levels in 10 food-deprived volunteers. Each volunteer was given an injection containing a radiotracer, a radioactive chemical “tag” designed to bind to dopamine receptors in the brain. The PET camera picks up the radioactive signal to measure the level of tracer. Since the tracer competes with dopamine for binding to the receptor, the amount of bound tracer can be used to infer the concentration of dopamine (more bound tracer = less dopamine).


These brain scans can be used to infer brain dopamine levels in the four experimental conditions (with and without food stimulation, paired with and without an oral dose of Ritalin). Note that the tracer signal in the Ritalin + food scan is significantly lower than the others. This is because the radiotracer competes with natural brain dopamine for binding to the receptor. When there is a lot of tracer bound (the first three conditions), it means there is not as much natural brain dopamine. When there is little tracer bound (as in the Ritalin + food scan), there is more natural brain dopamine occupying the receptor sites. So, it is an inverse relationship (a low tracer signal = a high dopamine level). Hi-res image (300 dpi jpeg).



Study subjects’ brains were scanned four times over a two-day period, with and without food stimulation, paired with and without an oral dose of methylphenidate. Methylphenidate (Ritalin) is known to block the reabsorption of dopamine into nerve cells. The researchers wanted to see if it would amplify any subtle changes in dopamine levels.

For food stimulation, the volunteers were presented with foods they had previously reported as their favorites. The food was warmed to enhance the smell and the subjects were allowed to view and smell it, as well as taste a small portion placed on their tongues with a cotton swab. As a control, during scans when food stimulation was not used, subjects were asked to describe in as much detail as possible their family genealogy. Study participants were also instructed to describe, on a scale of 1 to 10, whether they felt hungry or desired food prior to food stimulation and then at five-minute intervals for a total of 40 minutes.

The researchers found that food stimulation in combination with oral methylphenidate produced a significant increase in extracellular dopamine in the dorsal striatum. There was also a correlation between the increase in dopamine triggered by food stimulation and methylphenidate and the changes in self-reports of ‘hunger’ and ‘desire for food.’ “This suggests the dopamine increases during the food/methylphenidate condition reflect the responses to food stimulation and not the isolated effects of methylphenidate,” Volkow said.

The study demonstrates that methylphenidate, when used at low doses, amplifies weak dopamine signals. It also shows, for the first time, that the dopamine system in the dorsal striatum plays a role in food motivation in the human brain.

This relationship was not observed in the ventral striatum, which includes the nucleus accumbens, the area of the brain thought to be responsible for food reward. “We and others previously thought the nucleus accumbens was the primary brain region associated with regulating food intake by modulating reward and pleasure while eating,” said study coauthor Gene-Jack Wang. “These findings challenge that belief.”

This study was funded by the U.S. Department of Energy, which supports basic research in a variety of scientific fields, and the National Institute on Drug Abuse.

High-Tech Treatments


By Beryl Lieff Benderly

A patient arrives in the emergency room of a small hospital in rural Tennessee in acute need of psychiatric evaluation. The attending physician lacks the specialty training to evaluate whether the patient is at risk for suicide or harm to others—requiring hospitalization—and the nearest psychiatric hospital is located more than an hour away. What should the physician do?

In the past, a mobile crisis team would have been dispatched over mountainous roads for an hour's drive to make an evaluation. Today, a high-speed video teleconference between a member of the crisis team and the patient—in real time—takes place instead.

This accelerated evaluation procedure, as described by Susan Dimmick, Ph.D., a project manager at the Oak Ridge Associated Universities, in Oak Ridge, TN, is just one of the many applications of communications technology now available to deliver mental health and substance abuse care efficiently. More than two dozen presenters shared their expertise at a recent conference, "E-Therapy, Telehealth, Telepsychiatry, and Beyond," hosted by SAMHSA's Center for Substance Abuse Treatment (CSAT) in December.

Sheila M. Harmison, D.S.W., L.C.S.W., Special Assistant to the CSAT Director, moderated the conference, which drew researchers and service providers from across the Nation and from Canada to discuss a wide range of innovative programs that use e-mail, text messaging, Web sites, and voice-over-Internet telephone in addition to video teleconferencing. These technologies overcome barriers—including distance, physical immobility, and other disabilities, and social stigma—that prevent many Americans from receiving needed mental health care. Online CEUs for Counselors
Examples of these services include:

Low-income, inner-city mothers who are in recovery from substance abuse stay in daily contact with their counseling program via e-mail.

Children in remote Alaskan villages receive mental health treatment via video teleconference from providers located in facilities hundreds of miles away.

Middle school, high school, and college students participate in personalized substance abuse interventions over the World Wide Web.

Military veterans with post-traumatic stress disorder who live on sparsely settled Indian reservations in South Dakota and Wyoming receive mental health treatment via video teleconference.

Persons undergoing cognitive behavioral therapy for anxiety disorders use palmtop computers to receive messages of reinforcement and assess their own levels of anxiety while they go about their daily activities.

Alcoholics in recovery attend group therapy sessions via streaming video and voice-over-Internet from the privacy of their homes.

"Technology can assist in our larger goal to assure a life in the community for everyone," said CSAT Director H. Westley Clark, M.D., J.D., M.P.H. The goal is not to substitute traditional treatments for mental and addictive disorders, he emphasized. "The goal is to leverage the impact of people-based services."

The use of new communications technology in treatment for these disorders is in its infancy, Dr. Clark continued. "And there does appear to be a reluctance to adopt new technology."

Qualified mental health and substance abuse professionals must make use of these new technologies. Charlatans and quacks are trying to exploit the Internet and entice the unwary into many questionable so-called therapies, Dr. Clark cautioned. "If we in the orthodox community refuse to go ‘into the ether,' others will have no compunction." In other words, research needs to go forward vigorously to evaluate the usefulness of the various technology-assisted treatment approaches. "We have to determine if e-therapy is a reliable resource for substance abuse and mental health treatment," said Dr. Clark. "I think it is."

Kathryn Power, M.Ed., Director of SAMHSA's Center for Mental Health Services, also addressed the conference. "E-health, properly researched and implemented, holds great promise for improving the mental health of millions of Americans nationwide," she said. Not only is e-health incorporated in the goals of the SAMHSA Mental Health Transformation initiative, but through the use of these technologies excellent mental health care is delivered, and research accelerated.

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High-Tech Options
As equipment and service costs continue to decrease and the availability of high-speed broadband connections continues to increase, mental health and substance abuse practitioners find themselves with many advanced options for audio, video, and text technologies.

Wireless connections now match the speed of broadband cable modems, said Brent Carter, a product development officer for Verizon Wireless, in his presentation.

Advanced encryption and other security measures allow wireless communications to meet the privacy and confidentiality requirements of mental health and substance abuse professionals, added Donald "Desi" Arnaiz, M.A., President of Virginia Systems, Inc., and an engineer for Comcast. "Everything that you require for the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act—HIPAA—is available to you now."

Mental health and substance abuse treatment providers and other health care providers, however, must be sure to use equipment correctly. When selecting devices, for example, they must make certain that they obtain proper security technology. "Most people don't protect their wireless systems, but care providers must take that extra precaution," said Mr. Arnaiz.

Other recommendations include choosing devices appropriate to the intended purpose and making sure that all devices work together. Correcting errors in the integration of devices is in fact his company's "biggest headache," Mr. Arnaiz said. For practitioners to have a successful program, they must also spend time learning to use the equipment.

Some adaptations in treatment techniques will also be needed to meet the demands of technology, noted Ron Adler, Chief Operating Officer of the Alaska Psychiatric Hospital. His experience with the hospital's TeleBehavioral Health video teleconferencing system convinced him that the benefits vastly outweigh the costs in both time and money. "Build this system and the funding will come and the patients will come," he urged conference participants.

January 01, 2011

"E-Therapy" Raises Questions, Possibilities


Therapy in cyberspace? It sounds like something out of Aldous Huxley's futuristic novel, Brave New World. Yet both service providers and recipients are already using the Internet as a tool in the delivery of treatment services for mental and addictive disorders.

How does "e-therapy" work? What are its limitations? And is it useful? Continuing Education for MFT
SAMHSA's Center for Substance Abuse Treatment (CSAT) sponsored a meeting last year to explore some of these questions and to launch a dialogue on this recent innovation.

In his opening remarks, CSAT Director H. Westley Clark, M.D., J.D., M.P.H., identified the most fundamental issue: What is e-therapy? He noted, "We currently have no solid definition for this new mode of treatment."

David Nickelson, Psy.D., J.D., Director of the Office of Technology Policy and Projects for the American Psychological Association, suggested that in order to define e-therapy, several questions would need to be answered: Is it traditional psychotherapy using a new medium? Or is it actually a new type of therapy? Should it be considered something other than therapy, such as counseling?

He identified some questions pertaining to health service as well, such as:

How do ethical and legal guidelines apply to e-therapy?

Should e-therapy be regulated?

Can e-therapy sessions be kept private and confidential?

Is it clinically appropriate to use the Internet in this way?

Advantages/Disadvantages
Gary Walz, Executive Director of the ERIC Counseling and Student Services Clearinghouse at the University of North Carolina-Greensboro, said that people who are in the midst of a serious crisis are not good candidates for e-therapy. This includes people who are suicidal or are experiencing a serious drug addiction.

Mr. Walz further noted that some clients might feel uncomfortable discussing important subjects online, and that the lack of immediacy and nonverbal cues could be a disadvantage. He also observed that no state licensor codes deal with e-therapy, no legislation guides its use, and many professional liability insurance policies will not cover it.

Dr. Nickelson added that some pathologies might present problems to treatment online. For example, when individuals are online, they can alter their identities and claim to be a different age or gender. This could be particularly problematic in the treatment of people with certain personality disorders, he said.

Several participants expressed concern about establishing rapport between client and therapist-often considered vital to successful therapy-over the Internet.

But participants also discussed the potential advantages that e-therapy offers. Mr. Walz noted that therapy online could help reach underserved populations, including those in remote geographical regions. Also, counselors could continue to treat clients who relocate to other areas. Clients with time constraints or difficult schedules might find e-therapy more convenient, he said. All of these factors could enable many more people to receive treatment then receive it currently.

Guidelines and Standards
Professional organizations are developing professional guidelines and standards for addressing practices that are unique to Internet counseling. Doug Gilbert, Ph.D., NCC, ethics officer for the National Board of Certified Counselors, discussed his organization's process for developing standards. These standards address such issues as verifying the identity of the Internet client, determining if a client is a minor and therefore in need of parental or guardian consent, and explaining to clients the procedures for contacting an Internet counselor offline.

Donna Ford, NCC, LPC, Past President of the American Counseling Association, recommended that counselors provide individual online counseling only through a secure Web site or e-mail application that uses appropriate security measures including encryption. Even so, she said, clients should be informed that some information transmitted may not be secure. Client waivers should acknowledge the understanding of the limitations in ensuring confidentiality of information. She added that counselors should identify potential situations to clients in which confidentiality would have to be breached.

Volunteer: Popular New Year's Resolutions



Have an idea for a service project – like getting a group together to volunteer each week at a homeless shelter, or reading to kids at your local library? Learn how to turn your volunteer idea into a successful service project using our do-it-yourself toolkits below.

Education
Help close the achievement gap and reduce “summer learning loss” by reading with kids or organizing a book drive.

•Toolkit: Read with Children
Read with Children: The Facts
Children who are not engaged in learning between school years suffer from “summer learning loss.” Many of the achievement gaps that continue to exist for disadvantaged students today result not from students falling behind during the school year but rather losing out on chances to learn over the summer.

Did you know that if a young person reads only five books over the summer, the effect “is potentially large enough to prevent a decline in reading achievement scores from the spring to the fall?” footnote 1

Did you know that if a young person is read to at least three times a week, that person is twice as likely to score in the top 25% of reading? footnote 2

Commit yourself and a team of your friends, family, and neighbors to help young people close the summer learning gap by joining United We Serve. This tool kit will give you the basics to start a reading program from scratch, recruit a team, organize your group, and make an impact.

•Toolkit: Organize a Book Drive | en Español
Starting a Book Distribution Team: The Facts
80% of preschool and after-school programs serving low-income populations have no age-appropriate books for their children. footnote 1

A recent study shows that while in middle-income neighborhoods the ratio of age-appropriate books per child is 13 to 1, in low-income neighborhoods the ratio is 1 for every 300 children. footnote 2

The most successful way to improve the reading achievement of low-income children is to increase their access to print. Communities ranking high in achievement tests have several factors in common: an abundance of books in public libraries, easy access to books in the community at large and a large number of textbooks per student. footnote 3

Commit yourself and a team of your friends and neighbors to help increase reading achievement and literacy by joining United We Serve. This tool kit will give you the basics to run a book drive, organize your group, and make an impact.

What will you do to help increase reading and literacy?


Health
Promoting healthy lifestyles in your community is key to preventing costly disease and improving our nation's health.

•Toolkit: Support Community Gardens | en Español
•Toolkit: Starting a Walking Team | en Español
•Toolkit: Promote Back to School Health | en Español
Community Renewal
At a time when many Americans are struggling with the loss of their job or their home, you can help meet some of their most basic needs by working to reduce hunger, secure donated clothing and strengthen community resources.

•Toolkit: Support Local Food Banks | en Español
•Toolkit: Organize a Clothing Drive | en Español
Energy and Environment
Join your friends and neighbors to reduce energy by auditing your home and helping maintain public lands.

•Toolkit: Audit Your Home | en Español
•Toolkit: Maintain Public Lands | en Español
•Toolkit: Let's Glean! (USDA)
Veterans and Military Families
Support military families and veterans who have served our country.

•Toolkit: Connecting Veterans to Community Services
Disaster Preparedness
Help your community prepare for disasters.

•Toolkit: Preparing Your Community for Disasters
Create Your Own Project
Work with your neighbors to identify local needs and find solutions that work. MFT Continuing Education
•Toolkit: Create Your Own Project
Disclaimer of Endorsement
Toolkit references to any specific non-profit organization, commercial product, process, or service by trade name, trademark, manufacturer, or otherwise do not necessarily constitute or imply its endorsement, recommendation, or favoring by the U.S. Government or any agency thereof.
Creative Commons License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 Unported License.