Philosophy and Approaches to
Treating Eating Disorders
HealthyPlace.com Audio
Managed
Care and Eating Disorders
Patients with chronic conditions like anorexia nervosa which
require expensive treatments are most likely to have
difficulty getting the care they need under managed care
health plans. Anorexics are obsessed with weight gain and
starve themselves. The condition requires long term medical
and psychological treatment for which many insurers are
refusing to pay.
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Popular Diets: What's the Best Approach? This chapter provides a very simplistic summary of three main
philosophical approaches to
the treatment of eating disorders. These
approaches are used alone or in combination with one another according to
the treating professional's knowledge and preference as well as the
needs of
the individual receiving care. Medical treatment and
treatment with drugs
that are used to affect mental functioning are both discussed in other
chapters and not included here. However, it is important to note that
medication, medical stabilization, and ongoing medical monitoring and
treatment are necessary in conjunction with all approaches. Depending on how
clinicians view the nature of eating disorders, they will most likely
approach treatment from one or more of the following perspectives:
It is important when choosing a therapist that
patients and significant others understand that there are different theories
and treatment approaches. Admittedly, patients may not know whether a
certain theory or treatment approach is suitable for them, and they may need
to rely on instinct when choosing a therapist. Many patients know when a
certain approach is not appropriate for them. For example, I often have
patients elect to go into individual treatment with me or choose my
treatment program over others because they have previously tried and do not
want a Twelve Step or addiction- based approach. Getting a referral from a
trustworthy individual is one way to find an appropriate professional or
treatment program.
PSYCHODYNAMIC MODEL
A psychodynamic view of behavior emphasizes internal conflicts, motives,
and unconscious forces. Within the psychodynamic realm there are many
theories on the
development of psychological disorders in general and on the
sources and origins of eating disorders in particular. Describing each
psychodynamic theory and the resulting treatment approach, such as object
relations or self-psychology, is beyond the scope of this book.
The common feature of all psychodynamic theories is the belief that
without addressing and resolving the underlying cause for disordered
behaviors, they may subside for a time but will all too often return. The
early pioneering and still relevant work of Hilde Bruch on treating eating
disorders made it clear that using behavior modification techniques to get
people to gain weight may accomplish short-term improvement but not much in
the long run. Like Bruch, therapists with a psychodynamic perspective
believe that the essential treatment for full recovery from an eating
disorder involves understanding and treating the cause, adaptive function,
or purpose that the eating disorder serves. Please note that this does not
necessarily mean "analysis," or going back in time to uncover past events,
although some clinicians take this approach.
My own psychodynamic view holds that in human development when needs are
not met, adaptive functions arise. These adaptive functions serve as
substitutes for developmental deficits that protect against the resulting
anger, frustration, and pain. The problem is that the adaptive functions can
never be internalized. They can never fully replace what was originally
needed and furthermore they have consequences that threaten long-term health
and functioning. For example, an individual who never learned the ability to
self-soothe may use food as a means of comfort and thus binge eat when she
is upset. Binge eating will never help her internalize the ability to soothe
herself and will most likely lead to negative consequences such as weight
gain or social withdrawal. Understanding and working through the adaptive
functions of eating disorder behaviors is important in helping patients
internalize the ability to attain and maintain recovery.
In all of the psychodynamic theories, symptoms are seen as expressions of
a struggling inner self that uses the disordered eating and weight control
behaviors as a way of communicating or expressing underlying issues. The
symptoms are viewed as useful for the patient, and attempts to directly try
to take them away are avoided. In a strict psychodynamic approach, the
premise is that, when the underlying issues are able to be expressed, worked
through, and resolved, the disordered eating behaviors will no longer be
necessary. Chapter 5, "Eating Disorder Behaviors Are Adaptive Functions,"
explains this in some detail.
HealthyPlace.com Video

Anorexia: One Person's Story
In her
early twenties - Isabelle suffered from anorexia. It was a
real shock to her because she thought it was something that
only happened to teenagers. She believes it's important to
be open about eating disorders - because so many people
suffer from them in private. She also believes it's
important for sufferers to find something they enjoy doing -
so they have something positive in their lives to keep them
going. Isabelle's lifeline was dancing.
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Psychodynamic treatment usually consists of frequent psycho-therapy
sessions using interpretation and management of the transference
relationship or, in other words, the patient's experience of the therapist
and vice versa. Whatever the particular psychodynamic theory, the essential
goal of this treatment approach is to help patients understand the
connections between their pasts, their personalities, and their personal
relationships and how all this relates to their eating disorders.
The problem with a solely psychodynamic approach to treating eating
disorders is twofold. First, many times patients are in such a state of
starvation, depression, or compulsivity that psychotherapy cannot
effectively take place. Therefore, starvation, tendency toward suicide,
compulsive bingeing and purging, or serious medical abnormalities may need
to be addressed before psychodynamic work can be effective. Second, patients
can spend years doing psychodynamic therapy gaining insight while still
engaging in destructive symptomatic behaviors. To continue this kind of
therapy for too long without symptom change seems unnecessary and unfair.
Psychodynamic therapy can offer a lot to eating disordered individuals
and may be an important factor in treatment, but a strict psychodynamic
approach alone—with no discussion of the eating- and weight-related
behaviors—has not been shown to be effective in achieving high rates of full
recovery. At some point, dealing directly with the disordered behaviors is
important. The most well-known and studied technique or treatment approach
currently used to challenge, manage, and transform specific food and
weight-related behaviors is known as cognitive behavioral therapy.
COGNITIVE BEHAVIORAL MODEL
The term cognitive refers to mental perception and awareness. Cognitive
distortions in the thinking of eating disordered patients that influence
behavior are well recognized. A
disturbed or distorted body image, paranoia
about food itself being fattening, and binges being blamed on the fact that
one cookie has already destroyed a perfect day of dieting are common
unrealistic assumptions and distortions. Cognitive distortions are held
sacred by patients who rely on them as guidelines for behavior in order to
gain a sense of safety, control, identity, and containment. Cognitive
distortions have to be challenged in an educational and empathetic way in
order to avoid unnecessary power struggles. Patients will need to know that
their behaviors are ultimately their choice but that currently they are
choosing to act on false, incorrect, or misleading information and faulty
assumptions.
Cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT) was originally developed in the late
1970s by Aaron Beck as a technique for treating depression. The essence of
cognitive behavioral therapy is that feelings and behaviors are created by
cognitions (thoughts). One is reminded of Albert Ellis and his famous
Rational Emotive Therapy (RET). The clinician's job is to help individuals
learn to recognize cognitive distortions and either choose not to act on
them or, better still, to replace them with more realistic and positive ways
of thinking. Common cognitive distortions can be put into categories such as
all-or-nothing thinking, overgeneralizing, assuming, magnifying or
minimizing, magical thinking, and personalizing.
Those familiar with eating disorders will recognize the same or similar
cognitive distortions repeatedly being expressed by eating disordered
individuals seen in treatment. Disordered eating or weight-related behaviors
such as obsessive weighing, use of laxatives, restricting all sugar, and
binge eating after one forbidden food item passes the lips, all arise from a
set of beliefs, attitudes, and assumptions about the meaning of eating and
body weight. Regard-less of theoretical orientation, most clinicians will
eventually need to address and challenge their patients' distorted attitudes
and beliefs in order to interrupt the behaviors that flow from them. If not
addressed, the distortions and symptomatic behaviors are likely to persist
or return.
FUNCTIONS THAT COGNITIVE DISTORTIONS SERVE
1. They provide a sense of safety and control.
Example: All-or-nothing thinking provides a strict system of rules for an
individual to follow when she has no self-trust in making decisions. Karen,
a twenty-two-year-old bulimic, does not know how much fat she can eat
without gaining weight so she makes a simple rule and allows herself none.
If she does happen to eat something forbidden she binges on as many fatty
foods as she can get because, as she puts it, "As long as I have blown it I
might as well go the whole way and have all those foods I don't allow myself
to eat."
2. They reinforce the eating disorder as a part of the individual's
identity.
Example: Eating, exercise, and weight become factors that make the person
feel special and unique. Keri, a twenty-one-year-old bulimic, told me, "I
don't know who I will be without this illness," and Jenny, a
fifteen-year-old anorexic, said, "I am the person known for not eating."
3. They enable patients to replace reality with a system that supports
their behaviors.
Example: Eating disorder patients use their rules and beliefs rather than
reality to guide their behaviors. Magically thinking that being thin will
solve all of one's problems or minimizing the significance of weighing as
little as 79 pounds are ways that patients mentally allow themselves to
continue their behavior. As long as John holds the belief that, "If I stop
taking laxatives I will get fat," it is difficult to get him to discontinue
his behavior.
4. They help provide an explanation or justification of behaviors to
other people.
Example: Cognitive distortions help people explain or justify their
behavior to others. Stacey, a forty-five-year-old anorexic, would always
complain, "If I eat more I feel bloated and miserable." Barbara, a binge
eater, would restrict eating sweets only to end up bingeing on them later,
justifying this by telling everyone, "I'm allergic to sugar." Both of these
claims are more difficult to argue with than "I'm afraid to eat more food"
or "I set myself up to binge because I don't allow myself to eat sugar."
Patients will justify their continued starving or purging by minimizing
negative lab test results, hair loss, and even poor bone density scans.
Magical thinking allows patients to believe and try to convince others to
believe that electrolyte problems, heart failure, and death are things that
happen to other people who are worse off.
Treating patients with cognitive behavioral therapy is considered by many
top professionals in the field of eating disorders to be the "gold standard"
of treatment, especially for bulimia nervosa. At the April 1996
International Eating Disorder Conference, several researchers such as
Christopher Fairburn and Tim Walsh presented findings reiterating that
cognitive behavioral therapy combined with medication produces better
results than psychodynamic therapy combined with medication, either of these
modalities combined with a placebo, or medication alone.
Even though these findings are promising, the researchers themselves
concede that the results show only that in these studies, one approach works
better than others tried, and not that we have found a form of treatment
that will help most patients. For information on this approach, see
Overcoming Eating Disorders Client Handbook and Overcoming Eating Disorders
Therapist's Guide by W. Agras and R. Apple (1997).
Many patients are not
helped by the cognitive behavioral approach, and we are not sure which ones
will be. More research needs to be done. A prudent course of action in
treating eating disordered patients would be to utilize cognitive behavioral
therapy at least as a part of an integrated multidimensional approach.
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