Four Therapy Treatments for Eating Disorders
As doctors and mental health professionals better understand eating disorders, more treatment options have
become available for treating these sometimes life-threatening conditions. Individuals suffering from anorexia
nervosa, bulimia, and binge eating disorders should receive some type of therapy as soon as possible. Although oral
medications and hospitalization are often important components of an individual's treatment plan, some kind of
psychotherapy is always necessary to help treat the underlying cause that may have triggered onset of an eating
disorder.
1. Psychotherapy: Psychotherapy is the most common form of therapy for individuals who are commencing the most
difficult part of their treatment. Treatment of most eating disorders begins by treating the person's malnutrition
and helping them establish a steady weight gain plan, if they suffer from anorexia. Psychotherapy addresses the
underlying emotions that may have triggered onset of the eating disorder. Psychotherapy may focus on all aspects of
the psychological and emotional health of the eating disorder patient.
2. Psychodynamic therapy: This is a form of psychotherapy that refers to an approach of therapy that seeks to
encourage the patient to reveal the underlying feelings that may have triggered their eating disorder. Focus is put
on the meaning of those feelings, and understanding why those feelings exist. The approach of psychodynamic therapy
is based on the belief that there is an unconscious mind that operates as a kind of reservoir for feelings.
Sometimes, these feelings may be too painful for the patient to deal with at surface level, so they may be
suppressed in the unconscious (sometime referred to as the subconscious). Psychodynamic therapy is useful for
patients who have long lived with denial about their condition, or whose experience with an eating disorder is
strongly connected to a history of underlying negative emotions, beliefs, and thinking patterns.
3. Cognitive therapy: Cognitive therapy focuses on actively working towards changing though patterns and
revising long-standing beliefs that may be enabling an eating disorder. Negative thoughts are replaced with more
realistic, positive believes, and there is an attempt to understand what triggers the negative thoughts and
attitudes. Cognitive therapy is considered more of a "hands on" approach that seeks to help patients establish
normal eating patterns, caloric intakes, and healthy attitudes toward food and exercise. Cognitive therapy seeks to
provide patients with a safe and structured atmosphere in which to address fears, emotions, and negative thinking
patterns and beliefs.
4. Family therapy: Family therapy can be an important part of an individual's treatment plan. This type of
therapy operates on the principle that eating disorders are family problems, and that individuals need their
family's full support in order to reach a full recovery. Also, studies have shown that family members with eating
disorders have a strong influence on other family members. Family therapy seeks to provide a safe and productive
environment that allows open discussion regarding any concerns or questions that family members may harbor
regarding eating disorders. Family therapy also seeks to establish healthy attitudes toward food and exercise among
all family members.
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