Cognitive-Behavioral Therapy for Eating
Disorders
Treatment Overview
Cognitive-behavioral therapy is a very active type of counseling. During
cognitive-behavioral therapy for anorexia, the counselor:
-
Teaches you about
your illness, its
symptoms, and how to predict when symptoms will most likely recur.
-
Teaches you to keep a diary of eating
episodes,
binge eating, purging, and the events that may have triggered
these episodes.
-
Helps you eat more regularly, with meals
or snacks spaced no more than 3 or 4 hours apart.
-
Helps change incorrect beliefs about your
symptoms, which reduces the power the symptoms have over you.
-
Helps change ineffective or self-defeating
thought patterns into patterns that are more helpful. This improves
mood, provides a sense of mastery over your life, and helps reduce the
effect or stops the development of future episodes of symptoms.
-
Teaches ways to handle daily problems
differently. Sometimes the way a person handles problems increases the
likelihood of developing the illness again.
-
Helps change behaviors that do not work to
behaviors that help deal with the symptoms. Changing behaviors often
changes the number and severity of illness episodes.
-
Teaches exercises that reduce
fears and
concerns about physical symptoms that develop during emotional stress.
These exercises help a person bring physical symptoms such as irregular
or fast breathing under control.
What To Expect After Treatment
Cognitive-behavioral therapy sessions usually are held once a week for up
to 20 weeks. Individual sessions last 1 hour, and group sessions last 2
hours. Some people may need additional sessions to learn and be able to use
the new skills.
You will learn how to better handle stressful situations to avoid
triggering eating disorder behaviors.
Sometimes you may also need to take medications to treat symptoms of
other conditions that often occur with eating disorders, such as depression
or obsessive-compulsive disorder.
Why It Is Done
Cognitive-behavioral therapy is a very effective form of counseling used
to treat the
mental and emotional elements of an eating disorder. This type
of therapy is done to correct poor eating habits, prevent relapse, and
change attitudes about food, eating, and body image.
How Well It Works
Cognitive-behavioral therapy is considered very effective for the
long-term treatment of eating disorders. However, because eating disorder
behaviors can endure for a long period of time, ongoing psychological
treatment is usually required for at least a year and may be needed for up
to 6 years.1 Cognitive-behavioral therapy may be more effective in treating
bulimia nervosa rather than anorexia nervosa.
Risks
There are no known risks associated with cognitive-behavioral therapy.
What To Think About
For cognitive-behavioral therapy to be most effective, you need to work
together with your counselor toward common goals. If you think you are not
working well with your counselor, discuss your concerns with him or her or
your primary doctor.
Complete the special treatment information form to help you understand
this treatment.
References
Citations Steering Committee on Practice Guidelines, American
Psychiatric Association (2000). Practice guidelines for the treatment of
patients with eating disorders (revision). Supplement to American
Journal of Psychiatry, 157(1). Washington, DC: American Psychiatric
Association.
Credits
| Author |
Dana L. Rowett |
| Editor |
Geri Metzger |
| Associate Editor |
Lila Havens |
| Associate Editor |
Tracy Landauer |
| Primary Medical Reviewer |
Adam Husney, MD
- Family Medicine |
| Specialist Medical Reviewer |
W. Stewart Agras, MD
- Psychiatry |
| Last Updated |
October 1, 2003 |
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