Child Adolesc Psychiatr Clin N Am
January 2013
In clinical practice, psychodynamic approaches represent an important component of the treatment for young people with eating disorders (EDs), even though the research literature remains modest regarding the most effective treatment for children, adolescents, or adults with an ED. Although there are very few clinical research studies of individual or family psychodynamic treatments of EDs, there is some evidence for efficacy from clinical trials. This article reviews studies of psychodynamically informed therapies for the treatment of EDs and discusses how the findings, although limited, suggest that further research into psychodynamic treatments of EDs in youth is warranted.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFUnlabelled: Daughters with eating disorders (ED) were found to perceive family functioning more negatively than their mothers. This study examined variables that may underlie these differences in a subgroup of adolescent girls and their mothers from the original study.
Methods: Participants were 77 mother-adolescent daughter dyads.
The role of the family in the development of eating disorders has been a predominant research focus. However, few studies of patients in an eating disorder (ED) day treatment program (DTP) have explored the relationship between self-reported family system functioning, self-reported comorbid psychopathology and current comorbid psychological symptom status. This study examined patients at presentation to an ED DTP, their self-reported perception of family functioning and the relationship with characteristics of their own comorbid psychopathology characteristics.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThis study examines the perceived levels of family functioning and their relationships with eating pathology across three eating disorder diagnostic groups. Charts of 65 day treatment female patients, ranging in age from 12 to 27 years, were studied by diagnosis and assessed using the FACES-II and EDI-2. Using multiple regression analyses, it was determined that perceived family functioning yielded significant predictions for various EDI-2 subscales within both Anorexia Nervosa and Eating Disorder Not Otherwise Specified diagnoses.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFObjective: The current study compared the perceptions of family functioning between daughters with eating disorders (EDs) and their parents. This investigation was an expansion of the Fornari et al (Compr Psychiatry 1999;40:434-441) study, which investigated the relationship between the perceived family functioning and depressive symptoms in individuals with ED patients receiving outpatient services.
Method: One hundred twenty-six female subjects, ranging in age from 13 to 34 years (mean 18.
Eat Weight Disord
September 2003
Objective: In this study, we report on our day treatment program (DTP) for adolescents and young adults with eating disorders (EDs).
Method: Data for the 82 female patients in DTP were examined, compared across ED diagnosis and by age (adolescents vs. young adults).
This study explores the specific role of culture and religion in the development of eating disorders (ED) in Orthodox Jewish female adolescents. We present eight cases admitted to a Day Treatment Program (DTP) for Eating Disorders. Additionally, some preliminary comparisons are examined between Orthodox and all other patients, and also between ultra and modern Orthodox patients.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe relationship among eating disorders (EDs), psychosexual and identity development, and physical maturation (puberty) is reviewed. The developmental tasks of adolescence are summarized, and research from both community studies and clinical samples on the association between the development of an ED and putative risk factors that include pubertal development and psychosexual behaviors and attitudes for children and adolescents is reviewed. Specific issues explored include the role of child and adolescent abuse and EDs in males.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFInt J Eat Disord
July 2001
Objective: Corticosteroids have a wide range of clinical indications in the treatment of both acute and chronic medical illnesses, and weight gain is a well-documented side effect of their use. In this paper, we describe eight individuals with an eating disorder, which appeared following steroid administration for a medical condition.
Method: These findings, support the possibility that the excessive weight gain resulting from steroid use can be a precipitating factor in the development of an eating disorder, particularly among female adolescents and young women who are preoccupied with their appearance and weight.
Int J Eat Disord
April 2001
Objective: Although childhood sexual abuse has been a frequent focus of research on eating disorders, other forms of maltreatment have been less commonly reported. Parental medical neglect is examined in this study as having serious consequences for the treatment and prognosis of patients with anorexia nervosa.
Method: Two case studies illustrate parental interference with treatment in which Child Protective Services (CPS) had to be involved in compliance with state law.
The assessment of personality variables measured by the Minnesota Multiphasic Personality Inventory (MMPI), was compared in a sample of 52 female inpatients with anorexia nervosa at the time of hospitalization, discharge from hospital, and 10 years after treatment. Admission MMPI scores were significantly higher than scores both at discharge and 10 years later. There were no significant overall differences between discharge and follow-up evaluation.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA variety of sociocultural, familial and individual features associated with the eating disorders were examined in subjects with full syndrome (FS) and partial syndrome (PS) eating disorders and in normal high school students. The EAT-26 was administered to 995 high school students. This was followed by individual interviews with those who scored in the symptomatic range.
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