MY HOPES for 2015, Eating Disorders, and Mental Health
Transcription
MY HOPES for 2015, Eating Disorders, and Mental Health
2015 Gürze/Salucore Eating Disorders R E S O U R C E C A T A L O G U E The most widely used resource in the eating disorders field since 1980. The Weight-Bearing Years and The Body Myth… DBT in the Treatment of Eating Disorders Patrick J. Kennedy: “My Hopes for 2015, Eating Disorders, and Mental Health” AND MORE… Self-Help Books Professional Resources Conferences Conference Treatment Facilities National Organizations EDcatalogue.com Hello and Welcome to the 2015 edition of the Gürze/Salucore Eating Disorders Resource Catalogue! W e are thrilled and grateful to share this publication with you. When we took over this Catalogue in October 2013 from Leigh Cohn and Lindsey Hall, our goal was to continue to develop a stellar resource for our range of readers within the Eating Disorders treatment and recovery community. Based on your feedback, we have maintained the excellence set by Leigh and Lindsey and plan to make this our tradition. We are delighted to note we have expanded the number of articles specifically written for the Catalogue to provide you with learning opportunities from world-class experts in the field. Knowing more people receive our Catalogue than ever before encourages us to sustain our mission, which is to provide reliable information and resources on Eating Disorders and Recovery in order to promote understanding, compassion, support, and healing. Please take some time and examine the websites of the treatment centers listed in our Directory. Each facility upholds a high standard with the goals of health and recovery. With gratitude and best regards, Kathy Cortese, MSW, LCSW, ACSW Editor-in-Chief TA B L E O F C O N T E N T S My Hopes for 2015, Eating Disorders, and Mental Health . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3 by Patrick J. Kennedy 10 Things I Wish Everyone Would Know About Eating Disorders . . . . . . . . 5 by Edward P. Tyson, MD The Brain and the Pursuit of the Glucose That Sustains It . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6 by Scott Moseman, MD Diagnosing Anorexia Nervosa . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6 by the American Psychiatric Association About Eating Disorders . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7 Diagnosing Bulimia Nervosa . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8 by the American Psychiatric Association What Is a Binge? . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9 by Randi E. McCabe, PhD, Tracy L. McFarlane, PhD, and Marion P. Olmstead, PhD Building & Maintaining Relationships . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10 by Karen R. Koenig, LCSW, MEd What’s Behind the Urge to Binge Eat? . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11 by Leora Fulvio, MFT Diagnosing Binge Eating Disorder . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12 by the American Psychiatric Association Diagnosing Unspecified Feeding or Eating Disorder . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12 by the American Psychiatric Association NEDA . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13 For Partners and Loved Ones . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15 by Ilene Fishman, MSW, LCSW Perfectionistic Thinking and Doing . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 16 by Sondra Kronberg, MS, RD, CDN, CEDRD The Dual Diagnosis of an Eating Disorder and Type 1 Diabetes Mellitus . . 17 by Ovidio Bermudez, MD, FAAP, FSAHM, FAED, CEDS, Fiaedp Using Writing to Get in Touch With Self . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 19 by June Alexander Food Neutrality and Recovery: Clara’s Journey . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20 by Melainie Rogers, MS, RD DBT in the Treatment of Eating Disorders . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 21 by Zanita Zody, PhD, LMFT Counteracting an Eating Disorder Thought . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 22 by Carolyn Costin, MA, MEd, MFT, and Gwen Schubert Grabb, MFT Apps for Recovery . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 23 Tips to Feel Good About Your Body Regardless of Your Weight and Shape . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 24 by Ann Kearney-Cooke, PhD Predictable Challenges . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 25 by Dr. Deah Schwartz, EdD, CTRS, CCC Spirituality & Treatment . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 27 by P. Scott Richards, Randy K. Hardman, and Michael E. Berrett The Weight-Bearing Years and The Body Myth . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 28 by Margo Maine, PhD, FAED, CEDS Who Am I Without Ed? . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 29 by Jenni Schaefer The Binge Eating Monster Roared . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 30 by Andrew Walen, LCSW-C Fear . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 31 by Jenn Friedman Word Up on Dieting . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 32 by Jessica R. Greene From Weight to Respect . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 34 by Linda Bacon, PhD, and Lucy Aphramor, PhD, RD Body-States . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 35 by Jean Petrucelli, editor Ambivalence to Recovery: What Does the Brain Have to Do With It? . . . . . 37 by Dr. Alice Ely and Dr. Walter Kaye Treatment Facilities Index . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 40 How to Choose a Treatment Provider . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 42 by Lindsey Hall and Leigh Cohn 2015 Conferences . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 54 How Long Does It Take to Recover? . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 59 by Lindsey Hall and Leigh Cohn Book Index . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 62– 63 Copyright ©2015 Salucore, LLC unless otherwise stated. All rights reserved. Contents may not be reproduced without permission. MY HOPES “I will give you six months to get over this.” “Why are you doing this to our family?” “I’d love to have your problem.” No one would say these things to someone with cancer, diabetes, or heart disease. But those of us who have depression, addictions, or eating disorders often hear remarks like these—sometimes from wellintended friends and family. My hope is that 2015 is a year in which we make momentous progress in treating disorders of the brain the same way we treat diseases in any other part of the body. There’s a law that requires insurers to treat mental health concerns the same as they treat other health problems. When I was in Congress, I authored the Mental Health Parity and Addiction Equity Act to prohibit discrimination in insurance coverage. The challenge we face together now is making sure the law is enforced so that all of our brothers and sisters get the care they need. I sponsored the Parity Act and founded the Kennedy Forum because I heard too many stories of people with mental illness, including eating disorders, who were denied care. 60 Minutes recently highlighted the case of Katherine West, a teenager with bulimia who died of heart failure after her family’s insurance company insisted she be discharged early from treatment. We can’t lose any more young women—or men—like Katherine. No family should be shattered by the loss of a child. And as a nation, we need the Patrick J. Kennedy talents and contributions is the Founder of the Kennedy Forum of everyone to keep movand a former U.S. ing forward. The good Representative (D-RI) news is that there’s hope. Studies show that up to 80% of people with mental illness improve with appropriate diagnosis, treatment, and ongoing monitoring. Fifty years ago, when my uncle, President John F. Kennedy, signed the Community Mental Health Act, he said that people with mental illness “need no longer be alien to our affections or beyond the help of our communities.” We have learned a great deal about mental health since then, but President Kennedy’s declaration is a clear statement of our unfinished mission. Everyone matters. Everyone deserves to get the care they need. As we begin 2015, we stand on the doorstep of making historic progress in this new civil rights struggle that President Kennedy set in motion a half century ago. continued on page 39 PHOTO COURTESY OF PATRICK J. KENNEDY for 2015, Eating Disorders, and Mental Health Up to 80% of people with mental illness can improve. Eating Disorders Eating and its Disorders An Encyclopedia of Causes, Treatment, and Prevention Justine J. Reel John R. E. Fox & Ken Goss, editors 524 pages, paper, 2012 498 pages, hardcover, 2013 The Body Betrayed A Deeper Understanding of Women, Eating Disorders, and Treatment Kathryn J. Zerbe The Oxford Handbook of Child and Adolescent Eating Disorders 447 pages, paper, 1993 336 pages, hardcover, 2011 Developmental Perspectives James Lock, editor 800-756-7533 • EDcatalogue.com • 3 ANOREXIA NERVOSA Do You Have an Eating Disorder? NEW New Developments in Anorexia Nervosa Research Eating Disorders in the 21st Century Carla Gramaglia & Patrizia Zeppegno Respond honestly to these questions. Do you: 208 pages, hardcover, 2014 □ Constantly think about your food, weight, or body image? □ Have difficulty concentrating because of those thoughts? □ Worry about what your last meal is doing to your body? □ Experience guilt or shame around eating? When Anorexia Came to Visit □ Count calories or fat grams whenever you eat or drink? □ Feel “out of control” when it comes to food? □ Binge eat twice a week or more? □ Still feel fat when others tell you that you are thin? □ Obsess about the size of specific body parts? □ Weigh yourself several times daily? Families Talk About How an Eating Disorder Invaded Their Lives Bev Mattocks 254 pages, paper, 2013 □ Exercise to lose weight even if you are ill or injured? □ Label foods as “good” and “bad”? □ Vomit after eating? □ Use laxatives or diuretics to keep your weight down? Almost Anorexic □ Severely limit your food intake? Is My (or My Loved One’s) Relationship with Food a Problem? Jennifer J. Thomas & Jenni Schaefer If you answered “yes” to any of these questions, your attitudes and behaviors around food and weight may need to be seriously addressed. An eating disorders professional can give you a thorough assessment, honest feedback, and advice about what you may want to do next. 287 pages, paper, 2013 WARNING SIGNS • An obvious increase or decrease in weight not related to a medical condition • Abnormal eating habits, such as severe dieting, ritualized mealtime behaviors, fear of dietary fat, secretive bingeing, or lying about food • An intense preoccupation with weight and body image • Mood swings, depression, and/or irritability • Compulsive or excessive exercising, especially without adequate nutritional intake or when injured or ill Decoding Anorexia How Breakthroughs in Science Offer Hope for Eating Disorders Carrie Arnold 216 pages, paper, 2012 12-Step Approach Anorexics and Bulimics Anonymous The Fellowship Details Its Program of Recovery for Anorexia and Bulimia 288 pages, paper, 2002 4 • Request free copies of the 2015 Gürze/Salucore Eating Disorders Resource Catalogue 100 Questions & Answers About Anorexia Nervosa Sari Fine Shepphird 243 pages, paper, 2009 1 Things I Wish Everyone Would Know About Eating Disorders Eating disorders are potentially lethal illnesses, and no one should take them lightly as “It’s just a phase she’s going through,” or “He’ll grow out of it,” or “But she has the state meet to run in next week,” or “I feel fine and I don’t really need all these appointments.” Those are all examples of the denial of the stark reality of an eating disorder—these are deceptive, debilitating, dangerous illnesses. Make no mistake about it. 2 Do not treat those with eating disorders—that is for professionals trained to do so. But do not underestimate what you can do—you can do more than even a treatment team if you love the person who suffers and provide support with your confidence in that person. Keep reminding your loved one that, yes, it is the hardest work she or he has ever done, and if this person keeps working with the treatment team, she or he will succeed and have a life beyond anything imagined. People with eating disorders need the support of loved ones to help them through the dark times and to celebrate the successes and joy of good times. Please Eat… A Mother’s Struggle to Free Her Teenage Son from Anorexia Bev Mattocks 270 pages, paper, 2013 Brave Girl Eating The Inspirational True Story of One Family’s Battle with Anorexia Harriet Brown 268 pages, paper, 2010 3 Whenever possible, a treatment team is optimal. The team should consist of a physician, therapist, and dietitian, all of whom are skilled with eating disorders. A psychiatrist may also be needed to be part of the team. Finding team members skilled in eating disorders, especially physicians and psychiatrists, can be difficult, and there are many geographic locations where one would be lucky to find even one team member with skills in treating eating disorders. But find a team wherever you can. 4 Eating disorders do not go away on their own. They do not go away because one finds something else, like running or bodybuilding, or performing or some other diversion. They will last a lifetime if one does not receive adequate treatment—treatment that is intense enough and for a long-enough duration. One should not stop because one “feels better.” Ultimately, of course, one should feel better, but that is usually after dealing with some very difficult issues, and it is really best that the experience of the treatment team dictate when treatment intensity or frequency should be increased or decreased, or when a person no longer needs treatment. 5 Eating disorders do occur in celebrities—no one is immune. Because celebrities gain notoriety or are public about their eating disorders, it is easy for the public to believe that only celebrities or the rich and beautiful get eating disorders. But eating disorders can and do occur in anyone. In my experience, those who get eating disorders are special gifted people. Almost universally, they are empathic, intuitive, hardworking, and gifted in at least one of the following (and often more than one): academics, athletics, and creative expression. Some of these qualities can be hard to see if one is in the throes of an eating disorder, but when well or in recovery, those traits reemerge. That is why I call eating disorders “The Curse of the Blessed.” This article continues and can be found in its entirety at EDcatalogue.com. by Edward P. Tyson, MD 800-756-7533 • EDcatalogue.com • 5 ANOREXIA NERVOSA THE BRAIN and the Pursuit of the Glucose That Sustains It W ith more than 100 million neurons supporting trillions of connections, processes of the human brain are a manifestation of genetic variation, natural selection, and the environments in which our ancestors lived. Owing to the significance of food to our survival and the ensuing evolutionary pressures, a significant portion of the human brain is dedicated to the motivational, emotional, hedonic, and cognitive information processing that supports decisions about when, what, and how much we eat.1 Given the complexity of these neural systems, it should come as no surprise that aberrations in their activity and neuroarchitecture can lead to a variety of pathologic eating behaviors that can take many forms, including overfeeding (e.g., obesity), dysregulated feeding (e.g., binge eating and bulimia nervosa), and feeding that fails to meet the body’s energy needs (e.g., Diagnosing Anorexia Nervosa A. Restriction of energy intake relative to requirements, leading to a significantly low body weight in the context of age, sex, developmental trajectory, and physical health. Significantly low weight is defined as a weight that is less than minimally normal or, for children and adolescents, less than that minimally expected. B. Intense fear of gaining weight or of becoming fat, or persistent behavior that interferes with weight gain, even though at a significantly low weight. C. Disturbance in the way in which one’s body weight or shape is experienced, undue influence of body weight or shape on selfevaluation, or persistent lack of recognition of the seriousness of the current low body weight. by the American Psychiatric Association, excerpted from Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, Fifth Edition (DSM-5) ©2013 by American Psychiatric Publishing anorexia nervosa). Although it is not the intention of the author to claim that these disorders form a continuous spectrum of illness with common pathophysiologies, it may be useful to think about how the complex manifestations of certain eating pathologies may illuminate the breadth and depth of the neural circuitry that underlies feeding behavior. To this end, the present article will examine the neural bases of food reward processing in obesity and anorexia nervosa, in an attempt to open up the understanding of the complex processes that go into how and why we eat, and in ways this might affect our health or lead to disordered eating. This illustration shines a light on the future of research as it seeks to work outside of the confining box of taking collections of symptoms built into syndromes. Instead it hopes to take neural systems, defined by genetics, experience, and our environment, and give us a physiological look into behavior, which can help to focus our biologic and psychotherapeutic interventions in a more specific and targeted way. Mechanisms of Food Regulation Most models of food regulation offer two parallel systems that interact to influence eating behaviors.2 One is a homeostatic system comprising hormonal regulators of hunger, satiety, and adiposity levels. This system’s primary role is to maintain appropriate levels of energy balance through a complex process of metabolic signaling via neuropeptides such as leptin, ghrelin, and insulin, which act on hypothalamic and brain-stem circuits to stimulate or inhibit feeding.3 This system controls feeding to meet the body’s energy needs. In addition to these homeostatic mechanisms, brain reward systems play an important role in feeding behavior.4 It is these systems that drive us to eat because foods taste good and offer hedonic pleasure. Though it is not proposed that obesity and anorexia lie solely at opposite ends of a reward spectrum, it is nevertheless interesting to note how differences in food reward mechanisms appear to at least partially underlie the different unhealthy behaviors observed in obesity and anorexia. This article continues and can be found in its entirety at EDcatalogue.com. by Scott Moseman, MD Medical Director, Laureate Eating Disorders Program 6 • Request free copies of the 2015 Gürze/Salucore Eating Disorders Resource Catalogue E EATING DISORDERS ating Disorders are extreme expressions of a range of food and weight issues experienced by children, adolescents, and adults, males and females. Based on the current diagnostic categories in the recently published Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, Fifth Edition (DSM-5), “Feeding and Eating Disorders” fall into eight categories. Anorexia Nervosa is characterized by low weight resulting from restrictive eating and/or purging and an intense fear of gaining weight or being “fat.” The individual typically denies the seriousness of his/her low weight, even when emaciation is clear to others. Although Anorexia more commonly appears in the adolescent and young adult years, it can manifest in children and older adults. Lifetime prevalence of Anorexia Nervosa in the United States for females is 0.9% and 0.3% for males. Of those with the disorder, 33.8% receive treatment during their lifetime.* Bulimia Nervosa presents as binge eating followed by unhealthy compensatory weight-loss behaviors such as selfinduced vomiting, diuretic or laxative abuse, restricting, or excessive exercising. Individuals with Bulimia Nervosa can be of normal weight, underweight, or overweight. Lifetime prevalence of Bulimia Nervosa in the United States is 0.6% of the adult population. Average age-of-onset is 20 years old. Of those with the disorder, 43.2% receive treatment during their lifetime.* Binge Eating Disorder is characterized by repeated periods of eating large quantities of food, coupled with a sense of loss of control without regular compensatory behaviors. Lifetime prevalence for Binge Eating Disorder in the United States is 2.8% of the adult population. Average age-ofonset is 25 years old. Of those with the disorder, 43.6% receive treatment during their lifetime.* Other Specified Feeding or Eating Disorder occurs when an individual exhibits different Eating Disorder behaviors but does not meet the full criteria for other Eating Disorders. The remaining classified Feeding and Eating Disorders include Unspecified Feeding or Eating Disorder, Pica, Rumination Disorder, and Avoidant/Restrictive Food Intake Disorder. Causes of Eating Disorders are multidimensional and include biology, genetics, family background, individual traits, trauma, and cultural influences like the idealization of thinness. Symptoms can include depression, low self-esteem, poor body image, anxiety, loneliness, problems with relationships, and an obsession/overvaluation of food, appearance, and weight. Disordered Eating Behaviors, such as restricting, bingeing, and purging, that are initially a method of coping with painful feelings and situations become habitual, undermining physical health, self-esteem, and a sense of competence and control. Professional Treatment to understand and overcome the underlying causes, symptoms, and behaviors is usually recommended. *All figures cited are from: Hudson, J., Hiripi, E., Pope, H., Kessler, R. The prevalence and correlates of eating disorders in the National Comorbidity Survey Replication. Biological Psychiatry. 2007; 61:348-358. Anorexia Nervosa: A Guide to Recovery How to Disappear Completely Lindsey Hall & Monika Ostroff On Modern Anorexia Kelsey Osgood 190 pages, paper, 1998 272 pages, paper, 2013 Also Available in Spanish 800-756-7533 • EDcatalogue.com • 7 ANOREXIA NERVOSA ABOUT BULIMIA NEW Diagnosing Bulimia Nervosa A. Recurrent episodes of binge eating. An episode of binge eating is characterized by both of the following: 1. Eating, in a discrete period of time (e.g., within any 2-hour period), an amount of food that is definitely larger than what most individuals would eat in a similar period of time under similar circumstances. 2. A sense of lack of control over eating during the episode (e.g., a feeling that one cannot stop eating or control what or how much one is eating). My Name is Caroline, Second Edition A Candid, Hard-Hitting Account of a Seven-Year Descent into Bulimia, Leading Up to a Final Victorious Triumph of the Addiction Caroline Adams Miller 285 pages, paper, 2014 Positively Caroline How I Beat Bulimia for Good… and Found Real Happiness Caroline Adams Miller 278 pages, paper, 2013 B. Recurrent inappropriate compensatory behaviors in order to prevent weight gain, such as self-induced vomiting; misuse of laxatives, diuretics, or other medications; fasting; or excessive exercise. C. The binge eating and inappropriate compensatory behaviors both occur, on average, at least once a week for 3 months. D. Self-evaluation is unduly influenced by body shape and weight. Bulimia: A Guide to Recovery Lindsey Hall & Leigh Cohn 280 pages, paper, 2010 Also Available in Spanish E. The disturbance does not occur exclusively during episodes of anorexia nervosa. by the American Psychiatric Association, excerpted from Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, Fifth Edition (DSM-5) ©2013 by American Psychiatric Publishing Brain Over Binge Why I Was Bulimic, Why Conventional Therapy Didn’t Work, and How I Recovered for Good Kathryn Hansen 307 pages, paper, 2011 Descriptions of more than 350 books at EDcatalogue.com 50 Strategies to Sustain Recovery From Bulimia Jocelyn Golden 221 pages, paper, 2011 8 • Request free copies of the 2015 Gürze/Salucore Eating Disorders Resource Catalogue Binge? There are two types of binges that can occur with bulimia nervosa: objective and subjective binges. Objective Binge The Overcoming Bulimia Workbook Randi E. McCabe, Traci McFarlane & Marion P. Olmsted 220 pages, paper, 2003 An objective binge involves eating, within a specific period of time (usually less than two hours), an amount of food that is considered large compared to what most people would eat in the same situation. For example, an objective binge for Jenice, a thirty-fiveyear-old accountant, consisted of three bowls of cereal with milk, a container of ice cream, a large bag of chips, two dozen cookies, and a bottle of soda. Most people would agree that this does not look like a normal meal or snack. As well as eating an objectively large amount of food, for an episode to qualify as a binge, a person must feel a loss of control over her eating. Eating a large amount of food without feeling any loss of control is not considered a binge. It’s just overeating. But, when Jenice binged she had the feeling that she was unable to stop herself even if she wanted to. She also felt she couldn’t control how much she ate. She kept going until she was physically unable to eat any more. Subjective Binge A subjective binge occurs when a person eats and feels out of control, but the amount of food consumed is not large. For example, Clara has strict rules about what she can and cannot eat. Sometimes just eating one or two cookies makes Clara feel like she binged. Even though one or two cookies is a normal amount of food, Clara feels out of control while she is eating them. by Randi E. McCabe, PhD, Tracy L. McFarlane, PhD & Marion P. Olmsted, PhD Reprinted with permission from New Harbinger Publications, Inc. Copyright © 2004 by Randi E. McCabe, Tracy L. McFarlane & Marion P. Olmsted The Mindfulness & Acceptance Workbook for Bulimia Emily K. Sandoz, Kelly G. Wilson & Troy DuFrene The Dialectical Behavior Therapy Skills Workbook for Bulimia Ellen Astrachan-Fletcher & Michael Maslar 192 pages, paper, 2009 137 pages, paper, 2011 800-756-7533 • EDcatalogue.com • 9 BULIMIA W H AT I S A B I N G E E AT I N G BUILDING & MAINTAINING Relationships NEW I Already Have a Great Relationship… with My Refrigerator! Undoubtedly, at one time or another, you have thought of food as your best friend. It’s there for the taking—or it’s not more than a brief walk or car ride away— in all its glory, just waiting for you to pick it up for a hot date. Unlike certain people, food gives its all to you, and you perceive it as devoting itself completely to making you feel better. It has no needs of its own and offers no rebuffs or judgments. It lets you use it for pretty much whatever you please, and it never complains. But if food were a true friend, you wouldn’t be reading this book. I don’t know where the idea of “food as friend” began, but it really is silly, when you think of what the term friend means. Friends have our back, protect us from selfdelusion, offer their wisdom, and want the best for us. Food may be a comfort, but it’s never a friend. Yet it’s understandable that we may be drawn to it when true friends or intimates are not readily available—or when we lack a nurturing self to take care of us. Problems arise when you come to believe that food is better than people at helping you cope with life, you dream and fantasize about eating rather than enjoy real relationships, and you give up being with people in order to be with food. Sadly, you probably have had the experience of hanging out with friends or family, or even a date, and not having a bad time, when seemingly out of the blue, food cravings erupt even though you’re not hungry. Maybe last night’s leftovers are in the fridge, calling out to you, or maybe you have a vision of swinging by the fast-food joint and grabbing some takeout. Suddenly, the people around you seem to fall out of focus, and every fiber of your being is screaming to get out of where you are and to cozy up to a sweet or other treat. That’s how it goes when cravings overpower our food-warped minds. Outsmarting Overeating Boost Your Life Skills, End Your Food Problems Karen R. Koenig 232 pages, paper, 2015 NEW by Karen R. Koenig, LCSW, MEd Excerpted from Outsmarting Overeating: Boost Your Life Skills, End Your Food Problems ©2015 by Karen R. Koenig. Published with permission of New World Library, www.newworldlibrary.com 10 • Request free copies of the 2015 Gürze/Salucore Eating Disorders Resource Catalogue The Healing Journey for Binge Eating Journal Eight Week Journal Companion Michelle C. Market 160 pages, paper, 2014 The Healing Journey for Binge Eating, Volume One Michelle C. Market 164 pages, paper, 2013 Overcoming Binge Eating, Second Edition The Proven Program to Learn Why You Binge and How You Can Stop Dr. Christopher G. Fairburn 243 pages, paper, 2013 S ometimes, the short-term goal of a habit can override the long-term gain of quitting the habit. For example, your thinking could be, “If I eat this quart of ice cream right now, it will help me to feel better.” That might be true; however, this is the time to begin to slow down and think about what will happen after you eat that quart of ice cream. “If I eat that quart of ice cream tonight, I will feel better and be able to get some sleep. However, I will wake up in the morning in a fog, feeling sick and uncomfortable. I will also be angry at myself. I might not want to get out of bed. I might skip work or I might not meet up with my friends the way I was supposed to because I’m feeling so bad about myself. That might result in me spending the whole day at home alone and bingeing…” Although there is currently a great deal of emphasis on creating healing by living in the moment, and being in the now, this is very different than being compulsive. For example, if you are living in the now, you are being incredibly mindful of your thoughts, feelings, and needs. You are not trying to avoid them or push them away. When you are bingeing, you are giving in to an urge or a craving. You might think that this is what’s happening in the moment, but actually the urge to binge is about avoiding what’s happening in the moment. As you consciously let your mind slow down, you are able to stop to allow yourself to make decisions about what you really want to do. Have you ever felt like you woke up in the middle of the binge? That you really didn’t plan it, that it just happened without your consent? This is the opposite of living in the moment. This is actually denying the Stop Eating Your Heart Out The 21-Day Program to Free Yourself from Emotional Eating Meryl Hershey Beck 235 pages, paper, 2012 NEW Reclaiming Yourself from Binge Eating A Step-By-Step Guide to Healing Leora Fulvio 327 pages, paper, 2014 moment, doing something to shut out the moment. The moment then rebounds and accentuates itself. If you are feeling lonely and you binge to shut out that feeling, you will feel lonelier after the binge. You are probably bingeing because you are feeling a feeling that is uncomfortable to you, whether is it boredom, anxiety, sadness, loneliness, fear, stress, anger, or any other feeling that is challenging to feel. The irony is, the last thing you need when you are feeling badly is to make yourself feel worse with the self-flagellation that often comes from bingeing. At this point, you need understanding, self-love and attention. Binge eating is actually a signal that you are trying to take care of yourself emotionally. However, you might not know how to, so you binge in order to make yourself feel better and then you wind up feeling worse. What a vicious roundabout that we can get trapped in! by Leora Fulvio, MFT Excerpted from Reclaiming Yourself from Binge Eating: A Step-By-Step Guide to Healing © 2014 Ayni Books End Emotional Eating Using Dialectical Behavior Therapy Skills to Cope with Difficult Emotions and Develop a Healthy Relationship to Food Jennifer L. Taitz 240 pages, paper, 2012 800-756-7533 • EDcatalogue.com • 11 B I N G E E AT I N G WHAT’S BEHIND the URGE to BINGE EAT? Diagnosing Binge Eating Disorder NEW Does Every Woman Have an Eating Disorder? Challenging Our Nation’s Fixation with Food and Weight Stacey M. Rosenfeld A. Recurrent episodes of binge eating. An episode of binge eating is characterized by both of the following: 216 pages, paper, 2014 1. Eating, in a discrete period of time (e.g., within any 2-hour period), an amount of food that is definitely larger than what most people would eat in a similar period of time under similar circumstances. 2. A sense of lack of control over eating during the episode (e.g., a feeling that one cannot stop eating or control what or how much one is eating). B. The binge-eating episodes are associated with three (or more) of the following: 1. Eating much more rapidly than normal. 2. Eating until feeling uncomfortably full. 3. Eating large amounts of food when not feeling physically hungry. Secrets of Feeding a Healthy Family, Second Edition How to Eat, How to Raise Good Eaters, How to Cook Ellyn Satter 292 pages, paper, 2008 4. Eating alone because of feeling embarrassed by how much one is eating. 5. Feeling disgusted with oneself, depressed, or very guilty afterward. C. Marked distress regarding binge eating is present. D. The binge eating occurs, on average, at least once a week for 3 months. E. The binge eating is not associated with the recurrent use of inappropriate compensatory behavior as in bulimia nervosa and does not occur exclusively during the course of bulimia nervosa or anorexia nervosa. by the American Psychiatric Association, excerpted from Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, Fifth Edition (DSM-5) ©2013 by American Psychiatric Publishing Diagnosing Unspecified Feeding or Eating Disorder This category applies to presentations in which symptoms characteristic of a feeding and eating disorder that cause clinically significant distress or impairment in social, occupational, or other important areas of functioning predominate but do not meet the full criteria for any of the disorders in the feeding and eating disorders diagnostic class. The unspecified feeding and eating disorder category is used in situations in which the clinician chooses not to specify the reason that the criteria are not met for a specific feeding and eating disorder, and includes presentations in which there is insufficient information to make a more specific diagnosis (e.g., in emergency room settings). by the American Psychiatric Association, excerpted from Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, Fifth Edition (DSM-5) ©2013 by American Psychiatric Publishing 12 • Request free copies of the 2015 Gürze/Salucore Eating Disorders Resource Catalogue The Body Image Survival Guide for Parents Helping Toddlers, Tweens, and Teens Thrive Marci Warhaft-Nadler 122 pages, paper, 2013 800-756-7533 • EDcatalogue.com • 13 PA R E N T S & L O V E D O N E S NEW Surviving an Eating Disorder Strategies for Family and Friends Michelle Siegel, Judith Brisman & Margot Weinshel 222 pages, paper, 2009 By Her Side Eating Disorders and the Joy of Recovery for Young Women Deborah P. Schone & Shelby L. Evans 196 pages, paper, 2014 Your Dieting Daughter, Second Edition Antidotes Parents Can Provide for Body Dissatisfaction, Excessive Dieting, and Disordered Eating Carolyn Costin 256 pages, paper, 2013 The Parent’s Guide to Eating Disorders, Second Edition When Food is Family A Loving Approach to Heal Eating Disorders Judy Scheel Supporting Self-Esteem, Healthy Eating, and Positive Body Image at Home Marcia Herrin & Nancy Matsumoto 180 pages, paper, 2011 382 pages, paper, 2013 Family Eating Disorders Manual Guiding Families Through the Maze of Eating Disorders Laura Hill, David Dagg, Michael Levine, Linda Smolak, et al. 227 pages, spiral-bound, 2012 Parents’ Quick Start Recovery Guide Finding Help Fast When Your Child or Teen Has an Eating Disorder Lori Osachy 104 pages, paper, 2012 14 • Request free copies of the 2015 Gürze/Salucore Eating Disorders Resource Catalogue E ating disorders can be all-consuming for the person who is struggling, as well as for the people around that person. When someone you love has an eating disorder, it is often overwhelming. Here are four areas that can be helpful in navigating the challenge. Understanding and Knowledge The more you understand the issues involved both generally with eating disorders and specifically in the case of your loved one, the more you will be able to successfully offer your support during treatment and long-term recovery. Eating disorders defy logic and nature, which is why when you deal with them, you need specialized education. Your loved one believes she or he needs the eating disorder to function. This will, of course, be paradoxical to you, but if you can try to understand it, you will be better able to deal with the conflict between the disorder and the person who has it. It is important for you to remember that eating disorders are not a choice and they have come into being in your loved one for some very important purpose and needs that you can’t readily comprehend. As difficult as it may be to understand, eating disorders are a desperate attempt to feel better about oneself. They are an attempt for higher self-esteem. In addition, eating behaviors are a way to manage feelings, emotions, and conflicts. Restricting food (anorexia), bingeing and purging food (bulimia), and binge eating (binge eating disorder) are all painful and unhealthy ways your partner uses as a means to cope. Your partner may be stuck and unable to find a better way. The more you understand, the better attuned you can be in both listening to and hearing what your partner is feeling and trying to tell you. Communication It is challenging to feel as though you have to walk on eggshells when trying to deal with the irrationality of an eating disorder. I often see families frightened to say the wrong thing, fearing that it could cause harm or a relapse. There is a great fear of making everything worse while trying to help. But by learning to take risks, you can improve your essential communication and attunement skills. Eating disorders are actually a form of communication, and in psychotherapy, your loved one is learning to communicate with words instead of the illness. This is an important aspect of good treatment. Once sufferers understand more about what they are feeling underneath their eating disorders, they can then figure out how to feel more empowered to communicate with the people in their lives. Being able to communicate honestly, authentically, and with attunement is critical for you and for your partner. Listen carefully to what your loved one says and how she or he responds to what you say. For example, if you tell your loved one, “You look healthy,” that person may hear, ”You look fat.” Understand that you are interacting not only with your loved one, but also with that person’s eating disorder, which is a very powerful force. This article continues and can be found in its entirety at EDcatalogue.com. by Ilene Fishman, MSW, LCSW 800-756-7533 • EDcatalogue.com • 15 PA R E N T S & L O V E D O N E S FOR PARTNERS AND LOVED ONES H E A LT H Y B E H A V I O R S PERFECTIONISTIC Thinking and Doing IN NEED OF REPAIR: Perfectionist Thinking and Doing Perfection is a common thread in the development and exacerbation of many eating disorders. The low sense of self, ability, or purpose that leads to not feeling good about oneself often fuels perfectionism. The drive for perfection is a mechanism for establishing value or disguising feelings of worthlessness and is more often than not woven into the cloth of most eating disorders. This quest has many pitfalls, in particular the inevitable…all or nothing syndrome. We often hear: “I am either 100% on my program or I’ve totally lost it.” “If I can’t get A’s in school, I might as well not try.” “I cannot finish something unless it’s perfect.” “I didn’t exercise long enough.” “I did not lose enough weight.” “I didn’t practice enough.” “I will not allow myself to be pleased with or take ownership of anything unless it is extreme” (which perfection is). Because you are driven by the fear of failing and of being unworthy, the pursuit of perfection stops you from completing a paper, finishing a painting, dancing in front of anyone, wearing a bathing suit, going out socially, loving your thighs, or accepting yourself. If I am not the best, the thinnest, or the most perfect, then I open the door for that moment of doubt, followed by the discovery that I am truly not good enough at all—a fraud. Perfection keeps you from completion, judgment, and failure, and protects your low self-esteem from exposure. It keeps you stuck, unable to accomplish your goals or experience your potential. How many masterpieces, poems, communications, dinners, and gifts have been abandoned because they were not perfect, not good enough? How much genius and creativity has gone to the grave because perfection was unattainable? Relinquishing the need for perfection allows for the presence of feelings. It creates uncertainty, fear, risk, and doubt. There is no longer black or white, but gray, all different shades, intensities, and textures. Perfection feels safe, while the gray can be unpredictable and scary. People with eating disorders need to strive for the gray, the uncomfortable, the middle, in spite of the fear and discomfort. Once again, this signals a risk, one well worth taking. TOOL: 85% Thinking and Doing Start a list of things you have not done because of your eating disorder or because of the inability to get them perfect. You may make several lists of different categories: social, financial, professional, creative endeavors, pleasures, or just one master list. Set aside a week of time-outs devoted to making this happen. Keep adding to the list(s). Notice how many things you are not doing because they wouldn’t be done perfectly or according to a standard currently unattainable. Spend some time becoming aware of how this feels. This article continues and can be found in its entirety at EDcatalogue.com. by Sondra Kronberg, MS, RD, CDN, CEDRD The Comprehensive Learning Teaching Handout Series for Eating Disorders Sondra Kronberg 50 handouts, CD (PDF format), 2009 This is a compilation of Kronberg’s “Top 50” that she has used during her 30-year career treating eating disorders. These are ready-made, practical, diversified resources for educating a treatment team and staff members, for giving to families and patients, or for offering at talks and workshops. 16 • Request free copies of the 2015 Gürze/Salucore Eating Disorders Resource Catalogue Food to Eat Guided, Hopeful & Trusted Recipes for Eating Disorder Recovery Lori Lieberman & Cate Sangster 127 pages, paper, 2012 OF AN EATING DISORDER AND TYPE 1 DIABETES MELLITUS E ating disorders are complex illnesses with biological, psychological, and sociocultural underpinnings. A significant factor contributing to this complexity is the incidence of comorbid conditions—in other words, medical and psychiatric illnesses that occur alongside an eating disorder. In many cases, the two diagnoses are intertwined in some way, with one illness putting the individual at heightened risk for developing the other syndrome, or one illness increasing the morbidity and mortality risk of the other. In general, all conditions must be acknowledged and addressed in the treatment setting to support sustainable eating disorder recovery. Among health care professionals, the diagnosis of an eating disorder in an individual with type 1 diabetes is known as ED-DMT1. More specifically, the dual diagnosis of EDDMT1 describes the intentional misuse of insulin for weight control, including decreasing the prescribed dose of insulin, omitting insulin entirely, delaying the appropriate dose, or manipulating the insulin itself to render it inactive. Any of these actions can result in hyperglycemia (high bloodglucose levels) and glucose excretion in the urine, which causes weight loss. In a sense, calories are “purged” this way (hence the nonmedical term “diabulimia,” used widely across popular media). However, a person suffering from ED-DMT1 may not be diagnosed with bulimia or have other symptoms of bulimia, such as binge eating and self-induced vomiting. On the other hand, some individuals may withhold insulin only after they have binged as a method of purging. People suffering from ED-DMT1 may exhibit any number of eating Eat Q disorder behaviors—or they may only manipulate their insulin and otherwise have relatively normal eating patterns. Various studies have found that having type 1 diabetes puts the individual at increased risk for developing disordered eating or an eating disorder. One study found that between 7% and 35% of girls and women with type 1 diabetes met the criteria for what is termed a “sub-threshold” eating disorder—meaning they display symptoms of an eating disorder but do not meet the full criteria—and as many as 11% met the criteria for a full-syndrome eating disorder.1 Insulin manipulation has been documented even in young (preteen) females with DMT1.2 Among the general female population, the incidence of eating disorders is about 1% for bulimia nervosa and 0.5% for anorexia nervosa.3 Overall, the incidence and prevalence of DMT1 has been on the rise, and thus, it is foreseeable that the dual diagnosis of ED-DMT1 may also increase in the coming years.3 Several factors contribute to this heightened risk of developing an eating disorder alongside type 1 diabetes. A major contributing factor is the emphasis on food and dietary restraint associated with the education about and management of type 1 diabetes. This article continues and can be found in its entirety at EDcatalogue.com. by Ovidio Bermudez, MD, FAAP, FSAHM, FAED, CEDS, Fiaedp Chief Clinical Officer and Medical Director of Child and Adolescent Services, Eating Recovery Center NEW Unlock the Weight-Loss Power of Emotional Intelligence Susan Albers 320 pages, hardcover & paper, 2013 Intuitive Eating Embody Learning to Love Your Unique Body (and quiet that critical voice!) Connie Sobczak 288 pages, paper, 2014 A Revolutionary Program That Works Evelyn Tribole & Elyse Resch 344 pages, paper, 2012 800-756-7533 • EDcatalogue.com • 17 H E A LT H Y B E H A V I O R S THE DUAL DIAGNOSIS H E A LT H Y B E H A V I O R S The Rules of “Normal” Eating A Commonsense Approach for Dieters, Overeaters, Undereaters, Emotional Eaters, and Everyone in Between! Karen R. Koenig 240 pages, paper, 2005 Reinventing the Meal how mindfulness can help you slow down, savor the moment & reconnect with the ritual of eating Pavel G. Somov 203 pages, paper, 2012 Overcoming Body Dysmorphic Disorder A Cognitive Behavioral Approach to Reclaiming Your Life Fugen Neziroglu, Sony Khemlani-Patel & Melanie T. Santos 207 pages, paper, 2012 50 Ways to Soothe Yourself Without Food Susan Albers 218 pages, paper, 2009 Nice Girls Finish Fat Put Yourself First and Change Your Eating Forever Karen R. Koenig 254 pages, paper, 2009 Eat What You Love, Love What You Eat Michelle May 406 pages, paper, 2011 Mindsight The New Science of Personal Transformation Daniel J. Siegel 336 pages, paper, 2010 Eat What You Love, Love What You Eat for Binge Eating Michelle May & Kari Anderson 194 pages, paper, 2014 Mindful Eating A Guide to Rediscovering a Healthy and Joyful Relationship with Food Jan Chozen Bays 240 pages, paper, 2009 Includes audio CD 18 • Request free copies of the 2015 Gürze/Salucore Eating Disorders Resource Catalogue Precede An epiphany occurred to me when reading the several decades of diaries that I had written while experiencing anorexia nervosa. The disconnection between body and self was striking, causing me to reflect on the role of the diary as a survival, healing, and recovery tool. I became interested in how other people experienced such disconnection and in increasing awareness for others. I wanted to explore the potential of diary writing in facilitating a more embodied experience between self and body, first in identifying the condition and second by doing something about it. This exploration is the subject of my upcoming book, Using Writing as a Therapy for Eating Disorders: The Diary Healer. When a person develops an eating disorder, it’s common for disconnection to occur between body and self. This is evidenced in thoughts, feelings, and behaviors as the person progressively loses touch with, and becomes separated from, his or her authentic self. Background I grew up in the 1950s on an isolated family dairy farm in the state of Victoria, Australia. The farmhouse had no electricity, and certainly no television, until I was 11 years of age. I was never lonely, having developed a strong bond with nature and books. I developed a fascination for writing well before the age of 5, when I began formal education in the local one-room primary school. Books, combined with a fertile imagination, took me beyond the rural valley in which I lived. They inspired possibilities and dreams. I liked to write stories and, at age 9, won my first prize, a pen; my stories were accepted for publication in literary outlets such as The Australian Children’s Newspaper. Letter writing was another Anorexia Nervosa, Second Edition A Recovery Guide for Sufferers, Families, and Friends Janet Treasure & June Alexander 192 pages, paper, 2013 passion, and I had pen friends in Australia and overseas. In this way, for me, creative and expressive writing became a tool for connecting with the outside world and, inwardly, for strengthening belief in self. At the age of 16, I won a national writing competition prize, which enabled the purchase of a manual typewriter. My farming parents watched in awe as I sat the machine on our oaken kitchen table. Words were my friends because they were safe and accommodating, and did not judge. Developing an Eating Disorder and Starting a Diary Feeling authentically connected with words at this early age was important. At age 11, the same year I started a diary, I developed the eating disorder anorexia nervosa. Associated with many physical complications, anorexia nervosa has the highest mortality rate of any mental illness. My writing passion continued, but I increasingly turned to the diary to try to make sense of my inner and outer worlds. Unbeknownst to me at the time, I was embarking on a literary journey in which the diary would chronicle the loss and recovery of identity and self. The diary became a survival tool in both destructive and constructive ways. This article continues and can be found in its entirety at EDcatalogue.com. by June Alexander My Kid Is Back Empowering Parents to Beat Anorexia Nervosa June Alexander with Daniel Le Grange 272 pages, paper, 2010 Ed Says U Said Eating Disorder Translator June Alexander & Cate Sangster 288 pages, paper, 2013 800-756-7533 • EDcatalogue.com • 19 H E A LT H Y B E H A V I O R S Using Writing to Get in Touch With Self RECOVERY FOOD NEUTRALITY AND RECOVERY: Clara’s Journey F rom a nutritional perspective, recovery from an eating disorder requires developing a neutral relationship with food. But how do you do that? Especially living in the Western society we do, our relationship with food could be considered anything but neutral. It requires trust—a whole lot of trust. Learning to trust your body, learning to trust yourself around food. But it doesn’t happen overnight. And you need an experienced guide who can show you the way. For my clients who get there, they tell me it is a whole other freedom that they never knew existed. It is a place where the voice in your head is quiet for a change; a place where you can indulge in a craving without being terrified that you have veered off course and will never get back. A place where you can listen to your body as your guide to what you want to eat—the salad or the slice of pizza—and still be on track. There are stages to the food neutrality recovery process. And not everyone starts at the same stage. Some clients have periods in the day when they feel “safe” with food, while for others, there is no such thing. As nutritionists, our work is to determine where the client is on the food neutrality spectrum and to develop a plan accordingly. The recovery process usually takes a client from a more structured (read “safer”) eating plan to a more flexible eating plan, whereby the client is able to rely mostly on hunger, fullness, and satiety cues as a guide. The key here is less and less focus on portions and more reliance on fullness and satiety. Further, there is an Restoring Our Bodies, Reclaiming Our Lives Guidance and Reflections on Recovery from Eating Disorders Aimee Liu 240 pages, paper, 2011 increased inclusion of “high-risk” or “fear” foods particular to that client. The overall philosophy in helping clients develop a more neutral relationship with food is that all foods fit. Nothing is considered “good” or “bad”; rather, the philosophy embraces the idea that with everything in moderation, all foods can and do work. Finally, peace with food… Clara C (not the client’s real name) struggled with binge eating disorder. For her, eating was considered extremely risky, shameful, and morally wrong. And further, as she had gained weight since the onset of her eating disorder, she regarded eating as “unnecessary” to her survival. To help Clara step into the recovery process, we needed to provide her with a lot of structure to make this transition to a different way of eating as safe as possible. So we mapped out her entire day—with all meals and all snacks preplanned, preportioned, and evenly distributed throughout the day. By doing so, we could help diminish physiological binges that come about when clients starve themselves all day—often in response to a binge event the night before—only to fall prey to the same occurrence the next day. This article continues and can be found in its entirety at EDcatalogue.com. By Melainie Rogers, MS, RD Director of Balance Eating Disorder Treatment Center Making Peace with Your Plate Eating Disorder Recovery Robyn Cruze & Espra Andrus 224 pages, paper, 2013 You Can’t Just Eat a Cheeseburger How to Thrive Through Eating Disorder Recovery Justine Duppong 192 pages, paper, 2013 Starting Monday Seven Keys to a Permanent, Positive Relationship with Food Karen R. Koenig 280 pages, paper, 2013 Life Beyond Your Eating Disorder Reclaim Yourself, Regain Your Health, Recover for Good Johanna S. Kandel 240 pages, paper, 2010 20 • Request free copies of the 2015 Gürze/Salucore Eating Disorders Resource Catalogue D ialectic Behavior Therapy (DBT) is a popular modality being used for treating eating disorders, but many professionals still don’t fully understand its origin, use, and effectiveness. DBT was originally developed by Marsha Linehan as a result of the limitations she perceived when applying cognitive behavioral therapy to the treatment of women diagnosed with borderline personality disorder and engaging in selfharm behaviors such as self-mutilation through cutting, suicidal ideation, and chronic suicide attempts.i Following the publication of the original DBT manual in 1993, there has been increasing interest in the application of DBT to other populations, including individuals diagnosed with binge eating disorder (BED), bulimia nervosa (BN),ii and, to a lesser extent, anorexia nervosa (AN). Although there is limited research investigating the efficacy of DBT for the treatment of BED,iii BN,iv and AN,v,vi those studies that have been published are encouraging. The use of DBT for the treatment of eating disorders makes intuitive sense. Many of the presenting problems that DBT was first developed to treat—ineffective interpersonal skills, intense mood fluctuations, poor impulse control, and self-destructive behaviors—are frequently observed among individuals with eating disorders.vii What’s more, the four core skills that comprise the model—mindfulness, distress tolerance, emotion regulation, and interpersonal effectiveness—are almost always deficient in individuals with eating disorders. It is these four skills that will be used as a framework for the following discussion. Although Safer, Telch, Telling Ed No! and other practical tools to conquer your eating disorder and find freedom Cheryl Kerrigan Midlife Eating Disorders Your Journey to Recovery Cynthia M. Bulik and Chenii exclude interpersonal effectiveness from their manual describing how DBT has been adapted to treat BED and BN, that exclusion was based on research design concerns rather than an assumption that these skills were irrelevant. In practice, it can be said that interpersonal skills are vitally important to an individual’s recovery, and they will, therefore, be included in this discussion. This article continues and can be found in its entirety at EDcatalogue.com. by Zanita Zody, PhD, LMFT Clinical Director, Monte Nido & Affiliates i Linehan, M.M. (1993). Skills Training Manual for treating borderline personality disorder. New York: Guilford Press. ii Safer, D.L., Telch, C.F. & Chen, E.Y. (2009). Dialectical behavior therapy for binge eating disorder. New York: Guilford Press. iii Safer, D.L., Robinson, A.H. & Jo, B. (2010). Outcome from a randomized controlled trial of group therapy for binge eating disorder: comparing dialectical behavior therapy adapted for binge eating to an active comparison group therapy. Behavior Therapy, 41(1), 106-120. iv Safer, D.L., Telch, C.F. & Agras, W.S. (2001). Dialectical behavior therapy for bulimia nervosa. American Journal of Psychiatry, 158, 632-634. v Lynch, T.R., Gray, L.H.K., Hempel, R.J., Titley, M., Chen, E.Y. & O’Mahen, A. (2013). Radically open-dialectical behavior therapy for adult anorexia nervosa: feasibility and outcomes from an inpatient program. BMC Psychiatry, 13, 293. vi Salbach-Andrae, H., Bohnekamp, I., Pfeiffer, E., Lehmkuhl, U. & Miller, A.L. (2008). Dialectical Behavior Therapy of anorexia and bulimia nervosa among adolescents: A case series. Cognitive and Behavioral Practice, 15(4), 415-425. vii Costin, C. (2007). The Eating Disorder Sourcebook. New York: McGraw-Hill. Lasagna for Lunch Declaring Peace with Emotional Eating Mary Anne Cohen 348 pages, paper, 2013 352 pages, paper, 2013 189 pages, paper, 2010 Health at Every Size The Surprising Truth About Your Weight Linda Bacon French Toast for Breakfast Declaring Peace with Emotional Eating Mary Anne Cohen 272 pages, paper, 1995 400 pages, paper, 2010 800-756-7533 • EDcatalogue.com • 21 RECOVERY in the Treatment of Eating Disorders RECOVERY 1 2 3 4 5 Counteracting an Eating Disorder Thought T he following is a list of examples provided by our clients demonstrating how to challenge an eating disorder thought. These are short and to the point and will give you ideas to help you quickly and assertively challenge your eating disorder self. 8 Keys to Recovery from an Eating Disorder Effective Strategies from Therapeutic Practice and Personal Experience (8 Keys to Mental Health) Carolyn Costin & Gwen Schubert Grabb 296 pages, paper, 2011 1. Eating Disorder (ED) Self: The only way I can feel OK with myself and deal with my emotions is to restrict and exercise. Healthy Self: Even when you exercise and restrict you still don’t feel OK with yourself. Yes, it numbs you from your emotions temporarily, but those feelings don’t go away, they always come back. Exercising and restricting is only a quick fix. 2. ED Self: I had such a hard day. I deserve to eat whatever I want, which is a whole chocolate cake. Nothing will make me feel as good as bingeing does. Healthy Self: You did have a very hard day. You need to do something fun, or find something to help release all of your stress, like yoga or a nice bath, and have a piece of cake too. Eating the whole cake will feel good while you’re eating, but afterwards you just feel ashamed and even more stressed out about your eating and weight. Maintaining Recovery from Eating Disorders 3. ED Self: Even when I am at a healthy weight I will be miser- Avoiding Relapse and Recovering Life Naomi Feigenbaum able, so I might as well be thin and miserable, rather than fat and miserable. 240 pages, paper, 2011 The Emotional Eater’s Repair Manual A Practical Mind-Body-Spirit Guide for Putting an End to Overeating and Dieting Julie M. Simon 360 pages, paper, 2012 Healthy Self: You can’t predict how you will feel at a healthy weight because you have never been there long enough. All you know for sure is that you are absolutely miserable and alone when you are sickly thin. That is a known fact, whereas you don’t know how you will feel if you gain weight and become healthy. 4. ED Self: Even if I resist bingeing this one time, I am still fat and what will one night of healthy eating matter anyway? Seems like a waste of time to try. Eating in the Light of the Moon How women can transform their relationships with food through myths, metaphors & storytelling Anita Johnston 224 pages, paper, 2000 Healthy Self: Every time you are able to eat in a balanced and healthy way instead of bingeing, you are strengthening your skills for the next time. It’s never a waste to try. 5. ED Self: If I don’t lose weight, I can’t ever be happy. Healthy Self: Your mind is in control of your happiness, not your body. Making Weight Men’s Conflicts with Food, Weight, Shape & Appearance Arnold Andersen, Leigh Cohn & Thomas Holbrook 256 pages, paper, 2000 There are plenty of people who weigh as much as or more than you who are happy. If you work on making your life happier in a variety of ways, you might focus less on food, and both your mind and body will improve. by Carolyn Costin, MA, MEd, MFT & Gwen Schubert Grabb, MFT 8 Keys to Recovery from an Eating Disorder, W.W. Norton & Company © 2011 22 • Request free copies of the 2015 Gürze/Salucore Eating Disorders Resource Catalogue The Ritteroo Journal for Eating Disorders Recovery A Full Course Meal on Emotional Health Karen R. Koenig Lindsey Hall Artwork by Mary Anne Ritter 216 pages, paper, 2007 176 pages, paper, 2013 Finding Your Voice through Creativity The Art and Journaling Workbook for Disordered Eating Mindy Jacobson-Levy & Maureen Foy-Tornay 192 pages, paper, 2009 The Body Image Workbook, Second Edition An Eight-Step Program for Learning to Like Your Looks Thomas F. Cash The Hungry i A Workbook for Partners of Men with Eating Disorders Barbara Kent Lawrence 160 pages, paper, 2010 240 pages, paper, 2008 DVDs More handpicked, non-triggering movies at EDcatalogue.com Expressing Disorder Journey to Recovery, A Documentary David Alvarado/Structure Films expressingdisorder.com 2013 Speaking Out About ED 42 min., 2011 ED 101 The Facts About Eating Disorders… 30 min., 2012 Someday Melissa Includes Guided Discussions for Recovery 42 min., 2011 Recovering: Anorexia Nervosa and Bulimia Nervosa APPS for Recover y As with an y opportunity for health and the process is recovery, the responsibi lity of the indi Following are vidual. some of the Ap ps available fo and/or Androi r iPhone d use. This lis t is not an en but rather a su dorsement, ggestion for yo ur review. In al pha order: Body Beautif ul Cognitive Dia ry CBT Self-H elp Eating D App Counselor Emotes for D isordered Ea ting Mindfulness Bell OneHealth M eeting Finder Optimism Positive Thin king RecoveryBox Recovery Rec ord Rise Up + Rec over The Kissy Pr oject 42 min., 2011 800-756-7533 • EDcatalogue.com • 23 RECOVERY WORKBOOKS The Food & Feelings Workbook BODY IMAGE to Feel Good About Your Body Regardless of Your Weight and Shape A ssess your appearance less on external indicators of beauty (current beauty ideal, number on a scale, etc.) and more on the choices you make each day to feel good about your body and self. In a research study I recently conducted, it was found that as women kept track each day of the choices they made to feel better about their bodies (e.g., I took a walk today, I complimented my best friend, I ate healthy, I spoke up at a business meeting), they reported higher levels of body satisfaction. Ask yourself if you have ever been attracted to or fallen in love with someone who is not a “perfect 10.” Of course you have, because “perfect 10s” don’t exist. We all fall in love with people who are less than a “perfect 10.” You forget about your partner’s receding hairline or bulging belly because of his intelligence, great sense of humor, and loving touch. Attraction for men toward women is the same. They aren’t looking for “perfect 10s”—they fall in love with you as a whole package and ignore your imperfections because they love you. So make a commitment to stop wasting your time trying to look or act in a way that is not you. God created all of us with a certain body, mind, and spirit. Embrace that, focus on your signature strengths, and put your energy into your passions and the people you love. Chasing perfectionism leaves you disconnected from others and can lead to disordered eating. Challenge negative self-talk about your body. Researchers in the field of neuroscience have found that whatever you Full How one woman found yoga, eased her inner hunger, and started loving herself Kimber Simpkins focus on shapes your brain. If you are consistently thinking negative thoughts about your body, the neural pathway becomes stronger and these thoughts become automatic and habitual. Instead, challenge negative self-talk. When you have a negative thought about your shape or weight, see a stop sign and say, “STOP.” Tell yourself these thoughts are mental noise. Ask yourself: If your friend said this about herself, what would you say? You would probably challenge the negative thoughts and replace them with positive affirmations. Then switch your focus of attention to something else like calling a friend, meditating, or looking up something on the computer. Begin the process of rewiring your brain today. Consider trading your obsession with your weight and dieting for more joy and vitality in your life. Some individuals buy into the myth that if they can lose weight and look a certain way, they will be happier and have the life they always wanted. Sadly, many reach their weight goal and aren’t feeling happy or content, but report feeling exhausted and burdened with constant obsessing about food. Then they think, If only I lose more weight, I will feel energized and have the life I always imagined. This article continues and can be found in its entirety at EDcatalogue.com. by Ann Kearney-Cooke, PhD Living with Your Body & Other Things You Hate Emily Sandoz & Troy DuFrene 184 pages, paper, 2014 318 pages, paper, 2013 Body Image, Second Edition A Handbook of Science, Practice, and Prevention Thomas F. Cash & Linda Smolak 490 pages, paper, 2012 24 • Request free copies of the 2015 Gürze/Salucore Eating Disorders Resource Catalogue The Slender Trap A Food and Body Workbook Lauren Lazar Stern 272 pages, spiral-bound, 2010 PREDICTABLE H Challenges alloween is a tricky holiday for people struggling with body dissatisfaction and eating disorders. The ritual of trick-or-treating, whether you are on the giving or collecting side, can be fraught with frights that morph miniature chocolate bars into chainsaw-wielding serial killers. In addition, the preoccupation with consuming is magnified by the emphasis on costuming. Dressing up for Halloween adds another layer of anxiety and despair for those who may want to join in the fun but feel that the availability of costumes in larger sizes is limited—not only in terms of where they can be purchased, but the breadth of choices that are deemed “fat friendly.” The secret and mysterious nature of Halloween is replicated in how secretive many people are about their disordered eating and body dissatisfaction. Choosing to mask instead of share feelings is common and results in silent suffering and clandestine binge-eating episodes to manage stress. Fortunately, Halloween is at the end of the month, which provides 3 to 4 weeks to proactively prepare to navigate this ghoulish time of year. Dr. Deah’s Calmanac Your Interactive Monthly Guide for Cultivating a Positive Body Image Deah Schwartz 153 pages, paper, 2013 NEW Adolescence and Body Image From Development to Prevention (Adolescence and Society) Lina A. Ricciardelli & Zali Yager 224 pages, paper, 2015 Here are some things to consider: Are you masking or hiding your feelings with: ✱ Restrictive dieting or binge eating? ✱ Obsessing about your weight? ✱ Engaging in negative body talk either by yourself or with others? NEW Mirror, Mirror Off the Wall When you think about Halloween: ✱ Do you feel anxious about the availability of Halloween candy? How I Learned to Love My Body by Not Looking at It for a Year Kjerstin Gruys 320 pages, paper, 2014 ✱ Are you limiting your participation in fun events due to not feeling thin enough to wear a costume or “strong” enough to resist the treats? Take some time to explore what may happen if you: ✱ Declared a truce with yourself this Halloween and gave yourself permission to accept your body at the size it is now. ✱ Experiment with the idea that there are no “good” or “bad” foods (as long as there are no allergies or medical problems associated with specific foods) and that Halloween candy is available all year long. ✱ Do you think you would still binge if you trusted the fact The Woman in the Mirror How to Stop Confusing What You Look Like with Who You Are Cynthia M. Bulik 252 pages, paper, 2012 that this is not your ONLY chance to have these treats? by Dr. Deah Schwartz, EdD, CTRS, CCC Excerpted from Dr. Deah’s Calmanac, Dr. Deah’s Body Shop © 2013 800-756-7533 • EDcatalogue.com • 25 SPIRITUALITY NEW The Predatory Lies of Anorexia A Survivor’s Story Abby D. Kelly 196 pages, paper, 2014 Table in the Darkness A Healing Journey Through an Eating Disorder Lee Wolfe Blum 205 pages, paper, 2013 Love Your Body, Love Your Life Women, Food and God An Unexpected Path to Almost Everything Geneen Roth 5 Steps to End Negative Body Obsession and Start Living Happily and Confidently Sarah Maria 240 pages, paper, 2012 211 pages, paper, 2011 Starving Souls A Spiritual Guide to Understanding Eating Disorders— Anorexia, Bulimia, Binging… Rabbi Dovid Goldwasser CHRISTIAN 264 pages, paper, 2010 The Religion of Thinness Chasing Silhouettes How to Help a Loved One Battling an Eating Disorder Emily T. Wierenga 201 pages, paper, 2012 Images of His Beauty A 10 Week Bible Study for Young Women Desiring to Find Hope and Healing in Jesus Christ Tracy Davis Steel 112 pages, paper, 2012 Satisfying the Spiritual Hungers Behind Women’s Obsession with Food and Weight Michelle Lelwica 173 pages, paper, 2009 Hope, Help & Healing for Eating Disorders Revised and Expanded Gregory L. Jantz with Ann McMurray 200 pages, paper, 2010 26 • Request free copies of the 2015 Gürze/Salucore Eating Disorders Resource Catalogue & Conduct a Spiritual Assessment In our view, an assessment of the religious background and spirituality of patients with eating disorders is an essential part of a comprehensive assessment strategy. When patients are admitted for eating disorder treatment, a thorough assessment of their functioning should be conducted, including their physical, nutritional, psychological, social, and spiritual functioning. The overall goal of the spiritual assessment is to gain a clear understanding of each patient’s current spiritual framework so that the treatment staff can work within the patient’s belief system in a sensitive and respectful manner. Information about patients’ spirituality can be gathered through written intake questionnaires, clinical interviews, and standardized measures of religious orientation and spirituality. … Establish Spiritual Goals for Treatment We assume that every person has several important emotional and spiritual needs. We seek to address these needs during treatment in the ways we relate with the patients and through the interventions we use. The needs are as follows: 1. Having a sense of acceptance and belonging in a social sphere and in relation to God. 2. Having a sense of being important and valued in one’s family. 3. Having a sense of spirituality, purpose, hope, and meaning in life. 4. Having a sense of self through identification, individuation, self-awareness, and self-understanding. 5. Having a sense of principles and values in which one’s life is anchored. Therapists can help patients decide whether and how they want to use their faith and spirituality in treatment. Many patients feel that they have lost their spirituality during the development of their eating disorder and wish to set goals to rediscover their faith and spirituality. Some patients say that spirituality has never been important to them but that they would like to learn more about the possible role it could play in their recovery. Some patients say that they do not wish to include discussions about spirituality in their treatment, and such requests should of course be respected. Therapists and treatment staff should affirm the right of each patient to decide for herself what role faith and spirituality will play in her treatment and recovery and then seek to support and encourage patients in their spiritual goals. by P. Scott Richards, Randy K. Hardman & Michael E. Berrett Excerpted from Spiritual Approaches in the Treatment of Women With Eating Disorders First edition, APA, Washington DC, Spiritual Approaches Copyright © 2007 Reprinted with permission in the Treatment of Women With Eating Disorders P. Scott Richards, Randy K. Hardman & Michael E. Berrett 304 pages, hardcover, 2007 800-756-7533 • EDcatalogue.com • 27 SPIRITUALITY Spirituality Treatment The Weight-Bearing Years and THE BODY MYTH: The Perfect Storm of Eating Disorders and Body Image Despair in Adult Women T he face of eating and body image disorders is no longer a young one—age does not immunize women from body image preoccupation and weight concerns. While in the past, body satisfaction increased with age, today 79% of women older than age 50 in the U.S. express significant body distress and weight preoccupation, threatening their health and well-being, with 13% admitting to current eating disorder symptoms (Gagne et al., 2012). More adult women are seeking treatment for their eating disorders than ever before (Zerbe, 2013), with one treatment center specializing in eating disorders reporting a 400% increase in admissions of patients older than 40 in the previous decade (Cumella & Kally, 2008). In The Body Myth (Maine & Kelly, 2005), I proposed that the increase in eating disorders in adult women was the result of interactions among many complex biopsychosocial experiences, including a rapidly changing social role in a globalized, consumer culture; strict cultural standards regarding women, weight, and appearance; unattainable media Treatment of Eating Disorders Bridging the Research-Practice Gap Margo Maine, Beth Hartman McGilley & Douglas W. Bunnell 526 pages, hardcover, 2010 Father Hunger, Second Edition Fathers, Daughters, and the Pursuit of Thinness Margo Maine 317 pages, paper, 2004 The Body Myth Adult Women and the Pressure to Be Perfect Margo Maine & Joe Kelly 279 pages, hardcover, 2005 Effective Clinical Practice in the Treatment of Eating Disorders The Heart of the Matter Margo Maine, William N. Davis & Jane Shure 262 pages, hardcover, 2009 images; and the fear of obesity, fueled by misinformation and a $60 billion diet industry. Today’s women are emotional and cultural immigrants living in a world of unprecedented opportunities and equally unprecedented stress, with many finding their only comfort in the rituals of disordered eating, rigid dieting, exercise, and other body obsessions. Contemporary women carry the weight of novel responsibilities in their multiple roles today, still maintaining their families and personal lives while being pressured to adapt and achieve in this new world. Developmental transitions including marriage, divorce, pregnancies, parenting, midlife, career issues, empty nesting, and retirement all create risk in an era that promotes weight loss, thinness, and a youthful appearance as the ultimate signs of success for women. Add to this the rhythmic cycles of the female body, many of which are associated with weight gain. Premenstrual bloating, pregnancy, and the slower menopausal metabolism are great challenges today. If a woman’s power is still defined in terms of beauty and a youthful body, post-pregnancy weight gain and the pounds gained at menopause are nothing less than distressing and disempowering. Young or old, women are constantly bombarded by the relentless marketing of body-change technology (e.g., pills, surgeries, exercise equipment, “cosmeceuticals”). For many, the focus on appearance and youth intensifies as their bodies age and progress through the natural stages that include weight gain, graying hair, and wrinkled skin. Thus, aging creates new vulnerabilities for body image distress and eating disorders for all contemporary women. Although both clinical experience (Samuels & Maine, 2012) and research (Lewis & Cachelin, 2001) now tell us that disordered eating and a fear of aging go hand in hand for many women, many obstacles prevent adult women from seeking treatment. First and foremost is the lack of both professional and public recognition that eating and body image disorders occur, and occur frequently, in adult women. Add to that decades of living with the symptoms and with an unforgiving self-image, as well as the many secondary gains that extreme dieting, excessive exercise, and related behaviors can bring. Weight loss, a sculpted body, or a tightly controlled diet and exercise routine all elicit compliments and praise, no matter how self-destructive these symptoms really are. This article continues and can be found in its entirety at EDcatalogue.com. by Margo Maine, PhD, FAED, CEDS 28 • Request free copies of the 2015 Gürze/Salucore Eating Disorders Resource Catalogue WITHOUT ED? WHO AM I without Ed? We have been together for so long that I am afraid of what my life might look like without him. What if my life is actually worse without him? Sure, things are not exactly great with him. Okay, I admit that things are horribly miserable with Ed, but at least I’m thin. I would definitely rather be thin and miserable than fat and miserable. What if being recovered just means that I’m going to gain weight and be fat and miserable? I used to have all these thoughts. I know that many of you have too, because you have e-mailed them to me and sent me handwritten letters (yes, some people still do that). Still others have asked me these questions at presentations. At one time or another, most of us wonder if all this recovery mumbo jumbo is really just that—mumbo jumbo, meaningless talk. We wonder if all the pain and hard work are really worth it in the end. We wonder and we wonder, and then we wonder some more. What I have discovered is that we can wonder all we want as long as we are still taking steps along recovery road. We can walk and wonder at the same time. In fact, I wondered all these things all the way to that place I call recovered. For me, recovery was a big leap of faith. I held on to lots of hope. phoenix, Tennessee (music CD) I hoped that recovered actually existed. I hoped it was a great place, but I wasn’t so sure. I wondered and wondered, but I still kept walking, still had faith that life could be better. I wasn’t sure until I got here. But now I’m here, fully recovered. Now I know the answers to those questions. Yes, recovery is worth all the hard work. No, I am not just fat and miserable. In fact, I am happier than ever before, and I love my body. No, I am not as thin as I used to be, but I don’t want to be. My life without Ed is so much better than my life with him that I don’t even know how to express it. In my original draft, I wrote that my life is a million times better, but it is actually much better than that. I finally know who I am without Ed, and I learn more and more about myself every day. I will never stop learning. Some of the things I have learned: I am funnier than I thought; I am more intuitive than I believed. I am more in love with life than I ever imagined possible. The list goes on and on. by Jenni Schaefer Excerpted from Goodbye Ed, Hello Me: Recover from Your Eating Disorder and Fall in Love with Life © McGraw-Hill Education Goodbye Ed, Hello Me Recover from Your Eating Disorder and Fall in Love with Life Jenni Schaefer 249 pages, paper, 2009 Jenni Schaefer 7 songs, 2010 Eating to Lose Healing from a Life of Diabulimia Maryjeanne Hunt 160 pages, paper, 2012 Life Without Ed, 10th Anniversary Edition How One Woman Declared Independence from Her Eating Disorder and How You Can Too Jenni Schaefer with Thom Rutledge 188 pages, paper/audiobook, 2014 NEW Peoplescapes My Story from Purging to Painting Nancy Calef with Jody Weiner 156 pages, paper, 2014 Almost Anorexic Is My (or My Loved One’s) Relationship with Food a Problem? Jennifer J. Thomas & Jenni Schaefer 287 pages, paper, 2013 800-756-7533 • EDcatalogue.com • 29 PERSONAL STORIES Who Am I PERSONAL STORIES THE BINGE EATING MONSTER N othing in my life prepared me to cope with the anxiety and depression that blanketed me during George’s first year of life. Every morning I woke up with a panicked feeling that he had died in the night, and every day I struggled with the claustrophobic feeling of being trapped as a stay-athome dad with a very sick child. We couldn’t go out for very long or go very far during the day because he needed to be on oxygen all the time. The little canisters we used when we were out only lasted about 90 minutes and were a pain in the butt to lug around, so I usually stayed close to home. Most of our outings continued to be to restaurant buffets where George stayed in his baby carrier while I binged myself into numbness. When we were home most of my time was spent in front of the TV while George graduated from Baby Einstein to Teletubbies. I didn’t have the energy or inclination to do much more than sit there and think. I realized I was unhappy and that I needed something to look forward to in my life. I began to see how unhealthy I’d become both physically and emotionally. If I was going to be any kind of father for George I needed to do something about it. I needed a life direction that was completely mine again. I thought long and hard for weeks on end about my next career choice. I remembered how comforting it had been to have a mentor and guide early in my career as a musician and figured with so many new musicians looking to become famous in Nashville, there would be plenty of opportunity to create a small artist development company. But the more I thought about it the more I realized that wasn’t my goal. I didn’t want to just develop artists, I wanted to help develop people. When I was working for the newspaper and interviewing my subjects, learning what they thought, how they felt about themselves and about the work they did, it moved me deeply. The only problem was the frustration I felt at not being a more integral part of their “story.” I processed this and processed this until finally, while driving down the road with the windows down and the sunroof open, an epiphany hit me like a bolt of lightning. I wanted to be a therapist! by Andrew Walen, LCSW-C Excerpted from Man Up to Eating Disorders: A memoir and self-help book for men and boys struggling with body image, self-esteem, fat shaming, and eating disorders, BookBaby NEW Shattered Image My Triumph Over Body Dysmorphic Disorder Brian Cuban Man Up to Eating Disorders Andrew Walen NEW 202 pages, paper, 2014 224 pages, paper, 2013 My Thinning Years Starving the Gay Within Jon Derek Croteau 240 pages, paper, 2014 Ten-Mile Morning Second Son My Journey Through Anorexia Nervosa Adam Lamparello Transitioning Toward My Destiny, Love, and Life Ryan K. Sallans 163 pages, paper, 2012 240 pages, paper, 2013 30 • Request free copies of the 2015 Gürze/Salucore Eating Disorders Resource Catalogue Anorexia was a period of guarding, of keeping very tight tabs on things. Of maintaining control at all costs. And the prompter was fear. Fear made everything justifiable. It justified every eating disordered need. It made counting calories logical. It justified all my methods of bodychecking. It made the incrementally sicker incrementally safer. Signs of physical sickness became sources of validation. The more scared I became, the more limits I needed to impose in order to manage the fear. My world began and ended at my frame. There really was no distinction. I wholly became that. And in the end I would sit down, level with myself and feel okay. Okay in my tight spaces. Okay with the screen around me. If my body-checking produced desirable results, I deemed myself good. I was okay. I was calm. If my bodychecking produced undesirable results, I deemed myself bad. I was fearful. I was panicky. My world was shaken. And the anger….the anger at others who dared to mess up a food order, who acted so blasé about putting an extra this or that or God forbid estimate! How could they do that to me?! What were they thinking?! The anger at the world for not creating a controlled environment for my eating disorder to dwell. How dare they!! The anger at myself for bingeing. The shame of bingeing. The wire-high pedestal on which I put anorexia. The nerve of me! The judgments. The disgust. The shame. Calculating my way from morning till night, my world shrunk in accordance with my frame. Like yellowing paper crushed, crumbled and inverted, I imploded into myself. Like origami, I folded over and cut out pieces of myself in perfect symmetry. Like a hand-held compact mirror, I reformatted myself to fit and flatten on command. Eating Disorders on the Wire Music and Metaphor as Pathways to Recovery Jenn Friedman NEW 78 pages, paper, 2014 On the Wire Accompanying CD Jenn Friedman Music CD, 11 Songs NEW Dancing Through It My Journey in the Ballet Jenifer Ringer 288 pages, hardcover, 2014 Something Spectacular The True Story of One Rockette’s Battle with Bulimia Greta Gleissner 248 pages, paper, 2012 PR A Personal Record of Running from Anorexia Amber Sayer 246 pages, paper, 2013 Remembering Judith Ruth Joseph I see in hindsight that all the time I spent trying to reshape and resize myself could have been spent repositioning. All that focus required to move forward on the wire could have served in my attempt to turn around. I didn’t have to follow in the eating disorder’s path. I had that option. We have that option. by Jenn Friedman Excerpted from Eating Disorders on the Wire: Music and Metaphor as Pathways to Recovery, H.T.F.K. Press 226 pages, paper, 2013 A Girl Called Tim Escape from an Eating Disorder Hell June Alexander 267 pages, paper, 2011 800-756-7533 • EDcatalogue.com • 31 PERSONAL STORIES FEAR NEW K I D S / T E E N S / Y O U N G A D U LT S WORD UP F ashioning yourself into an arbitrary idea of body perfection is a dangerous game, and the culture of size zero tribes can contribute to major medical problems. The long-term-health effects of trying to maintain an abnormally low weight affect all systems of the body. Metabolically, our bodies don’t know the difference between a purposeful diet and an unfortunate famine. If we don’t feed them enough of what is needed to take care of daily energy and maintenance requirements, they make adjustments. Diets teach the body KIDS how to become more efficient at storing energy and less willing to use it. When you start a low-calorie diet, your body breaks down muscle, in addition to fat, to get what it needs. With less muscle, it’s harder to expend energy. Your body therefore needs less calories to maintain its activity— although it still requires sufficient food nutrients—and beefs up on fat stores when you indulge in excess calories. A recent review of thirty-one long-term diet plans published in American Psychologist found dieters gained back more weight over time than people similar to them who didn’t diet.12 The evidence convinced the authors to advise Medicare and Medicaid policy makers that diets are counterproductive for weight control. The authors even noted that at the end of the survey, the dieters were still gaining weight. As we’ve become aware, physiological and psychological changes that occur with dieting contribute to the complex core of eating disorders. Besides hair loss and heart failure, starvation, malnutrition, and purging techniques lead to • brain shrinkage Beautiful Girl • esophagitis Celebrating the Wonders of Your Body Christiane Northrup with Kristina Tracey Illustrated by Aurelie Blanz Girls ages 4–10 • osteoporosis • muscle wasting • joint deterioration • dental issues • electrolyte disturbances (causing nerve damage, arrhythmia, and cardiac arrest) 28 pages, hardcover, 2013 No “Body” is Perfect But They are All Beautiful Denise Folcik Illustrated by Lily Weber Ages 3– 6 32 pages, paper, 2012 Even minor and short-term eating disturbances contribute to greater struggles with appetite and weight control in the years to come. Young people with ED symptoms are also at higher risk later in life for more significant physical and mental disorders. According to one long-term study that followed over 700 New York youth through the 1980s and ‘90s, those with eating disorders were more likely to have heart trouble, sleep disturbances, and problems with anxiety and mood disorders, chronic fatigue, and infectious diseases.13 by Jessica R. Greene Excerpted from Eating Disorders: The Ultimate Teen Guide (It Happened to Me, No. 39) Rowman & Littlefield, All Rights Reserved Full Mouse Empty Mouse A Tale of Food and Feelings Dina Zeckhausen Illustrated by Brian Boyd Ages 7–12 12 Shan Guisinger, “Dangers of Dieting a Body Adapted to Famine” (special article for F.E.A.S.T.), March 2012, feast-ed.org/Resources/ArticlesforFEAST/ DangersofDietingaBodyAdaptedtoFamine.aspx (accessed April 2013). 13 Jeffrey G. Johnson, Patricia Cohen, Stephanie Kasen, and Judith S. Brook, “Eating Disorders during Adolescence and the Risk for Physical and Mental Disorders during Early Adulthood,” Archives of General Psychiatry (presently, JAMA Psychiatry ) 59, no. 6 (June 2002): 545. doi:10.1001/archpsyc.59.6.545. 40 pages, paper, 2008 32 • Request free copies of the 2015 Gürze/Salucore Eating Disorders Resource Catalogue TWEENS / TEENS / YA Can I Tell You About Eating Disorders? Eating Disorders A Guide for Friends, Family and Professionals Bryan Lask & Lucy Watson Illustrated by Fiona Field Kids ages 7–15 The Ultimate Teen Guide (It Happened to Me Series) Jessica R. Greene Teens 316 pages, hardcover, 2014 56 pages, paper, 2014 How I Look Journal, Fifth Edition Molly & Nan Dellheim Middle & high school girls 160 pages, paper, 2013 The Stone Girl Alyssa B. Sheinmel Teens 224 pages, hardcover, 2012 The Ultimate Tween Survival Guide Dina Zeckhausen Girls ages 9 –13 316 pages, paper, 2012 My Feet Aren’t Ugly A Girl’s Guide to Loving Herself from the Inside Out Debra Beck Teens 176 pages, paper, 2011 Girl Lost: The Bulimia Workbook for Teens Activities to Help You Stop Bingeing and Purging Lisa Schab Teens Finding Your Voice Through Eating Disorder Recovery Lynn Moore Girls ages 9–13 62 pages, paper, 2011 156 pages, paper, 2010 Reflections of Me Girls and Body Image (What’s the Issue?) Kris Hirschmann Girls ages 11–13 48 pages, library binding, 2009 800-756-7533 • EDcatalogue.com • 33 K I D S / T E E N S / Y O U N G A D U LT S NEW NEW PREVENTION FROM WEIGHT TO Respect NEW Body Respect What Conventional Health Books Get Wrong, Leave Out, and Just Plain Fail to Understand about Weight Linda Bacon & Lucy Aphramor Our Mission Our ultimate goal in Body Respect is to champion a paradigm shift—from weight to respect. We examine what weight means to our bodies, how our metabolisms work, and the mechanisms involved, including concepts like “fat” and “calories” that carry so much baggage in our society. We also look at exercise; the science of dieting; biases around fat and bodies, and the impact of prejudice and privilege; and a collection of other cultural factors that affect individuals’ health. Throughout, we consider how dogma, myths, and prejudices about fatness, presented as the value-laden “obesity” have trumped actual evidence in our society’s evolving views of weight and health. Relying on fact and sound judgment—and with a passion for fairness and equality—we work in every chapter to separate scientific fact from panicked assumption, unraveling the tangle our culture has made of weight and body shape. From the stillevolving science of modern diet and health, we draw practical lessons and recommendations for effective interventions and policies. We also provide personally applicable, self-help style recommendations that could make a difference in your own life as well as the lives of current or future clients and patients. 232 pages, paper, 2014 NEW The Big Disconnect Protecting Childhood and Family Relationships in the Digital Age Catherine Steiner-Adair with Teresa H. Barker 384 pages, hardcover/paper, 2014 NEW Support for You A warning is in order: If you do get past any initial skepticism about HAES [Health At Every Size], the next possible hazard is the frustration of dealing with everyone around you who hasn’t. It can be exhausting to believe in a new paradigm, a completely changed view of familiar matters, and to have to defend or explain it again and again to everyone mired in old ways of thinking. HAES advocates are not above critique, nor is its theory set in stone or its strategies unanimously agreed upon. It’s critical that the movement be open to the inevitability of flaws, gaps, and new perspectives, including proactively seeking input from marginalized communities. But to be positioned as an ambassador for any cause can be draining. That’s where education and the HAES community come in. There is a large and growing community around HAES and size acceptance, both online and in associations, and at workshops and conventions. And as books and courses on this topic proliferate, workshops emerge, and more clinics adopt HAES ideas, there is hope for more. The Good Parenting Food Guide Managing What Children Eat Without Making Food a Problem Jane Ogden 242 pages, paper, 2014 Healthy Habits The Program plus Food Guide Index & Easy Recipes: 8 Essential Kid-Friendly Nutrition Lessons Every Parent and Educator Needs Laura Cipullo 108 pages, paper, 2013 Healthy Bodies (curriculum) Teaching Kids What They Need to Know Kathy J. Kater 260 pages, paper, 2012 by Linda Bacon, PhD & Lucy Aphramor, PhD, RD Excerpted from Body Respect: What Conventional Health Books Get Wrong, Leave Out, and Just Plain Fail to Understand about Weight, BenBella Books, September 2014 34 • Request free copies of the 2015 Gürze/Salucore Eating Disorders Resource Catalogue self- and body-states, will inevitably be pulled into the relational dynamics implicated in the patient’s symptoms. You cannot treat this group from the outside; you have got to get your hands dirty and dig in the dirt. Interpersonal and relational psychoanalysis has always taken this as foundational to treating anyone. Digging in the Dirt How can we understand a patient’s relationship to food—what he or she does with it and how he or she thinks of it—in relational terms? Entering treatment, a person’s relationship with food is often the single-most significant relationship in his or her life. The symptoms have lost connection to the problems and vulnerabilities that stimulated their onset and have a life of their own: They are not ingrained habits, with their own rhythms and expressions. For example, food may begin as a “valued friend/secret companion that helps” lessen anxiety or soothe unbearable feelings. Over time, however, food may become a “strict taskmaster or abusive tyrant that harshly punishes transgressions” (Davis, 2009, p. 37). The therapist is often pulled into this relational configuration, first idealized and valued, and then feared as the rule maker. by Jean Petrucelli, editor Excerpted from Body-States: Interpersonal and Relational Perspectives on the Treatment of Eating Disorders in the format Republish in a journal/magazine via Copyright Clearance Center NEW Reflections of Body Image in Art Therapy Healing Eating Disorders with Psychodrama and Other Action Methods Eating Disorders and Mindfulness Exploring Self Through Metaphor and Multi-Media Margaret R. Hunter Beyond the Silence and the Fury Karen Carnabucci & Linda Ciotola Exploring Alternative Approaches to Treatment Leah M. DeSole, editor 205 pages, paper, 2012 272 pages, paper, 2013 176 pages, hardcover/paper, 2014 800-756-7533 • EDcatalogue.com • 35 P R O F E S S I O N A L T R E AT M E N T I n the eating-disordered patient, symptoms are “used” to compensate for a lack of capacity to reflect and deal with conflict, or to counteract difficulty in mentalizing. Unable to reflectively experience a part of oneself or another, this patient has difficulty experiencing having a mind of one’s own. Meanwhile, self-development is sadly derailed. On a gut level, eating-disordered patients do not feel that others can imagine what they feel on the inside. They never feel like they are ‘good enough.’ For these patients, self-states—ways of being and expressing that allow a certain representation or part of the self to emerge—might be defined as the experience of what they can and/or cannot be curious about, relative to the self-state they are in. Sometimes, what is needed is for the patient to experience that we can know her experience, and feel it viscerally in our bodies (Sands, 1997), creating an uncanny, ‘shared’ body-state. Patients can experience relating to the analyst— another body in the room sometimes—by projecting his or her disowned parts onto the analyst and by relating to the analyst as an embodied other. In turn, processing this mutual experience allows the patient to experience body-states relationally and to reflect upon this experience. A body-state has to do with embodiment: how one lives in the body, at a given moment, relative to the felt experience. This can be internally accepted as a part of oneself—or not. By definition, body-states are nonverbal experiences and may not be known through the mind with words. The body ‘articulates’ the unspoken. Interpersonal/relational perspectives recognize that the therapist, engaging with the patient’s disowned/dissociated P R O F E S S I O N A L T R E AT M E N T NEW Wellness, Not Weight Eating Disorders, Addictions and Substance Use Disorders Research, Clinical and Treatment Perspectives Timothy Brewerton & Amy Baker Dennis, editors Health at Every Size and Motivational Interviewing Ellen Glovsky 288 pages, paper, 2013 681 pages, hardcover, 2014 NEW Cognitive Remediation Therapy (CRT) for Eating and Weight Disorders NEW Body-States Interpersonal and Relational Perspectives on the Treatment of Eating Disorders Jean Petrucelli, editor Kate Tchanturia 254 pages, hardcover/paper, 2014 354 pages, paper, 2014 Cognitive Behavior Therapy and Eating Disorders Christopher G. Fairburn 324 pages, hardcover, 2012 Current Findings on Males with Eating Disorders Leigh Cohn & Raymond Lemberg 232 pages, hardcover, 2013 Night Eating Syndrome Research, Assessment, and Treatment Jennifer D. Lundgren, Kelly C. Allison & Albert J. Stunkard 299 pages, hardcover, 2012 Eating Disorders and the Brain Bryan Lask & Ian Frampton 238 pages, hardcover, 2011 Acceptance and Commitment Therapy for Eating Disorders Emily K. Sandoz, Kelly G. Wilson & Troy DuFrene 265 pages, hardcover, 2011 Overcoming Eating Disorders, Second Edition Therapist Guide W. Stewart Agras & Robin F. Apple 134 pages, paper, 2008 Overcoming Your Eating Disorder, Second Edition Workbook Acceptance & Commitment Therapy for Body Image Dissatisfaction Adria N. Pearson, Michelle Heffner & Victoria M. Follette 202 pages, hardcover, 2010 197 pages, paper, 2008 36 • Request free copies of the 2015 Gürze/Salucore Eating Disorders Resource Catalogue AMBIVALENCE TO RECOVERY O ne of the greatest challenges about treating eating disorders is what is frequently described as apathy or ambivalence about recovery. In the case of anorexia nervosa (AN), people seem to be indifferent to activities and rewards that others might consider to be enjoyable and motivating, while individuals with bulimia nervosa (BN) may impulsively value instant gratification over more long-term goals. While we are still learning about these relationships to reward, recent research in neurobiology suggests that they may be two sides of the same coin. Most people tend to prefer positive, rewarding stimuli or experiences rather than punishment (e.g., unpleasant events) or loss, especially when they’re hungry.1 This is evolutionarily useful—if we were too worried about possible consequences, then we might never risk leaving the cave to find food. However, recent studies suggest that the brains of people with eating disorders seem to respond similarly to both positive and negative feedback. This suggests that these people may have difficulty, at least in a neural sense, telling them apart. In AN, we see elevated brain activation in response to reward and to punishment, but not in the area that is typically involved in motivating or important stimuli, a brain region called the ventral striatum.2 Instead, the activity is in areas of the brain linked to planning and consequences.3 Those with AN may rely on these cognitive processes to compensate for an altered reward response when evaluating choices or making decisions. Thus, they may be more likely to consider consequences than to respond to immediate gratification. The brain response in BN is a little different. Brain imaging research has shown that, like in AN, the response to reward and punishment is similar, but individuals with BN don’t have the same exaggerated activity in the areas of the brain related to inhibition.4 In fact, some studies suggest that they may have less inhibitory control. They do, however, have an elevated reward response to food in the ventral striatum.5,6 We know that individuals with eating disorders have some dysfunction in how they process rewards, particularly when it comes to food. The findings suggest that people with AN may be experiencing a perpetual state of satiety, while individuals with BN may be feeling chronically deprived.7 Moreover, difficulties in evaluating important information— whether good or bad—may contribute to patients’ ambivalence toward treatment and recovery. So how can we make treatments better, given what we know about the neurobiology of people with AN and BN? There is some evidence that these differences in reward are temperament traits,8 so we might have more luck working with them as opposed to against them. Psychoeducation about these neurobiological differences with individuals with eating disorders and those who care about them is especially important, both to depersonalize symptoms of the disorders and to reduce blame. Moreover, our group9 is developing a treatment that teaches skills to allow people to constructively use their temperament to recover. Beyond this, we will need to work to develop treatments or treatment packages that can best allow us to support recovery, even when there is ambivalence. by Dr. Alice Ely, Wismer Scholar and Postdoctoral Research Fellow, UCSD Dept. of Psychiatry, ED Treatment & Research Program and by Dr. Walter Kaye, Director, UCSD Eating Disorders Program, Professor, UCSD Dept. of Psychiatry References 1 Wang K, Zhang H, Bloss C, Duvvuri V, Kaye W, Schork N, et al. A genome-wide association study on common SNPs and rare CNVs in anorexia nervosa. Molecular Psychiatry. 2010;Epub ahead of print. 2 Yin H, Knowlton B. The role of the basal ganglia in habit formation. Nature Neuroscience Rev. 2006;7(6):464-476. 16715055. 3 Konishi S, Nakajima K, Uchida I, Sekihara K, Miyashita Y. No-go dominant brain activity in human inferior prefrontal cortex revealed by functional magnetic resonance imaging. Eur J Neurosci. 1998;10:1209-1213. 9753190. 4 Wagner A, Aizeinstein H, Venkatraman V, Bischoff-Grethe A, Fudge J, May J, et al. Altered striatal response to reward in bulimia nervosa after recovery. Int J Eat Disord. 2010;43(4):289-294. 19434606. 5 Bohon C, Stice E. Reward abnormalities among women with full and subthresh old bulimia nervosa: a functional magnetic resonance imaging study. Int J Eat Disord. 2011;44(7):585-595. 21997421. 6 Oberndorfer T, Frank G, Fudge J, Simmons A, Paulus M, Wagner A, et al. Altered insula response to sweet taste processing after recovery from anorexia and bulimia nervosa. Am J Psychiatry. 2013;170(10):1143-1151. 23732817. 7 Wierenga C, Bischoff S, Melrose J, Irvine Z, Torres L, Bailer U, et al. Hunger does not motivate reward in anorexia nervosa. In Press. Biological Psychiatry. 2014. 8 Kaye W, Wierenga C, Bailer U, Simmons A, Wagner A, Bischoff-Grethe A. Does a shared neurobiology for foods and drugs of abuse contribute to extremes of food ingestion in anorexia and bulimia nervosa? Biological Psychiatry. 2013;73(9):836-842. 23380716. 9 Kaye W, Wierenga C, Knatz S, Liang J, Boutelle K, Hill L, et al. Temperament Based Treatment (TBT) for Anorexia Nervosa. In Press. European Eating Disorders Review. 2014. 800-756-7533 • EDcatalogue.com • 37 P R O F E S S I O N A L T R E AT M E N T What Does the Brain Have to Do With It? NUTRITIONISTS & DIETITIANS P R O F E S S I O N A L T R E AT M E N T FAMILY-BASED TREATMENT Eating Disorders in Children and Adolescents The Eating Disorders Clinical Pocket Guide, Second Edition Daniel Le Grange & James Lock Quick Reference for Healthcare Providers Jessica Setnick 512 pages, hardcover, 2011 139 pages, spiral-bound, 2013 Nutrition Counseling in the Treatment of Eating Disorders, Second Edition Treatment Manual for Anorexia Nervosa, Second Edition Marcia Herrin & Maria Larkin A Family-Based Approach James Lock & Daniel Le Grange 347 pages, paper, 2013 271 pages, hardcover, 2012 CLINICAL GUIDES Treatment Plans and Interventions for Bulimia and Binge-Eating Disorder NEW Beyond a Shadow of a Diet, Second Edition Rene D. Zweig & Robert L. Leahy 180 pages, paper, 2012 The Comprehensive Guide to Treating Binge Eating Disorder, Compulsive Eating, and Emotional Overeating Judith Matz & Ellen Frankel 338 pages, paper, 2014 A Clinician’s Guide to Binge Eating Disorder June Alexander, Andrea Goldschmidt & Daniel Le Grange 304 pages, paper, 2013 Recovery from Eating Disorders A Guide for Clinicians and Their Clients Greta Noordenbos 176 pages, paper, 2013 A Collaborative Approach to Eating Disorders June Alexander & Janet Treasure 344 pages, paper, 2011 Integrated Treatment of Eating Disorders Beyond the Body Betrayed Kathryn J. Zerbe 280 pages, hardcover, 2008 Doing What Works An Integrative System for Treating Eating Disorders from Diagnosis to Recovery Abigail Horvitz Natenshon 380 pages, paper, 2009 38 • Request free copies of the 2015 Gürze/Salucore Eating Disorders Resource Catalogue MY HOPES for 2015, Eating Disorders, and Mental Health continued from page 3 brain functioning. Chronic stress, anxiety, poor With an average of 105 suicides each day in the United nutrition, pollution, and unhealthy conditions underStates, our cause cannot wait. In 2015, the Kennedy Forum mine our ability to achieve our potential. To improve will bring the mental health community together around a mental health outcomes, we will need to look at every common set of principles. These principles include: aspect of people’s lives. • Payer accountability. We need to It’s going to take all of us—policy learn how insurance companies makers, medical experts, business leaders, make their coverage decisions. With advocates across the political spectrum, The 2008 Parity Act greater transparency, we will find and people like you and me and our loved out whether insurers are complying guarantees that ones—to fully implement the Mental with the Parity Act and treating Health Parity and Addiction Equity Act Mental Illness, mental health the same as physical and set a new standard for the future of health. Addiction, and mental health care in the United States. • Provider accountability. We must Eating Disorders We need your help to let policy make care more patient-centered makers, insurers, and providers know and intervene earlier to improve will be treated like that mental health care is a basic human mental health outcomes. Ultimately, any other disease. right. We need you to speak out and help provider accountability will lower eliminate the stigma that surrounds eating costs because we will treat mental We must work disorders, mental illness, and addictions. illnesses before they become severe together to fully Most of all, we need your help in and more expensive to manage. educating friends and family that fair • System integration. Although it has implement this law. insurance coverage for mental health, been shown repeatedly that inteincluding eating disorders, is the law. As grating mental health treatment into a doctor recently wrote, people with eating disorders are general health care produces better outcomes and “empathic, creative, intuitive, hardworking, and usually reduces costs, we continue to maintain siloed payment gifted…When [they] are free of their illness, they are incredand service delivery systems. When we talk about ible people to know and be around.” Please use the resources joining mind and body, system integration is where at the Kennedy Forum website to enforce your rights under the rubber meets the road. We’ve got to get this right. the Parity Act and get back to the lives you and your loved • New technologies. We have generated more scientific ones were intended to live. data in the last five years than in the entire history of Together, we can make 2015 a year of incredible strides humankind, according to Harvard Professor Winston toward achieving President Kennedy’s vision of an America Hide. With faster computers and more sophisticated where everyone has access to care and treatment, housing analytical software, we can diagnose and treat mental and employment, and everything they need to thrive. illness like never before. Thank you for all you do. • Brain fitness. Learning, staying engaged in life, managing stress, and getting enough sleep improve by Patrick J. Kennedy LINKS www.thekennedyforum.org/parity www.cbsnews.com/news/mental-illness-health-care-insurance-60-minutes/ www.workplacementalhealth.org/Business-Case.aspx www.jfklibrary.org/Asset-Viewer/Archives/JFKPOF-047-045.aspx www.cdc.gov/violenceprevention/pdf/suicide_datasheet-a.pdf www.thekennedyforum.org/mystory www.edcatalogue.com/ten-things-wish-physicians-know-eating-disorders/ www.thekennedyforum.org/resources 800-756-7533 • EDcatalogue.com • 39 STATE PG TREATMENT FACILITY STATE PG CH ILD TE REN EN AD S UL FE TS M A M LES AL ES TREATMENT FACILITY TREATMENT FACILITIES CH ILD TE REN EN AD S UL FE TS M A M LES AL ES TREATMENT FACILITIES INDEX ACUTE Center for Eating Disorders at Denver Health CO 50 x x x x Laureate Eating Disorders Program (males outpatient only) OK 57 x x x The Eating Disorder Program at Brandywine Hospital PA 58 x x x x Loma Linda University Behavioral Medicine Center CA 50 x x x x Cambridge Eating Disorder Center MA 54 x x x x McCallum Place Eating Disorder Centers x x x x 46 x x x x x x x Castlewood Treatment Center AL, CA, MO Center for Change UT 60 The Center for Eating Disorders at Sheppard Pratt MD 53 CRC Eating Disorders Programs CA, NV, NC x 41 x x x x x x x McLean Klarman Eating Disorders Center MA 54 The Ranch TN 58 Reasons Eating Disorders Center CA 47 x x AZ 47 x River Oaks Hospital x x x KS, MO 42 x x x x x x LA 53 x x x x Robert Wood Johnson University NJ Hospital Somerset Eating Disorders Program 55 x x x x x x x x x x x x x x x Rogers Behavioral Health Eating Recovery Center of California CA 49 x x x x x Eating Recovery Center of Dallas TX 59 x x x x x Eating Recovery Center of Denver CO 51 x x x x x Eating Recovery Center of Ohio OH 57 x x x x Eating Recovery Center of San Antonio TX 60 x x x x Eating Recovery Center of Washington WA 61 x x x x ED-180 Eating Disorder Treatment Program NY 55 x x x x Fairwinds Treatment Center FL 53 The Healthy Teen Project CA 47 The Hearth SC 58 Insight Behavioral Health Centers/ Eating Recovery Center IL 52 Johns Hopkins Eating Disorders Program x x x x x x x x x x x x x x x 53 x x x x FL, WI 44 Sanford Health Eating Disorders and Weight Management Center ND 56 Sierra Tucson AZ 46 x x Texas Health Resources Presbyterian Dallas Eating Disorders Program TX 59 x x Torrance Memorial Medical Center’s Medical Stabilization Program for Adolescents and Young Adults CA 48 x x x x x UCSD Eating Disorders Center for Treatment and Research CA 50 x x x x x University Medical Center of Princeton at Plainsboro— Center for Eating Disorders Care NJ 55 x x x x x Upstate New York Eating Disorder NY 55 Service, Sol Stone Center and The Nutrition Clinic x x x x x Veritas Collaborative x x x x x x x x x Walden Behavioral Care MD x x 42 x x x CO x x x Eating Disorder Center of Denver x x The Renfrew Center 41 CA, CT, FL, GA, IL, MA, MD, NJ, NY, NC, PA, TN, TX x x x Remuda Ranch at The Meadows x x x x x x x x 42 43 x x CO Eating Recovery Center CA, CO, IL, OH, TX, WA x x Eating Disorder Center of Colorado Springs Eating Disorder Center of Kansas City MO, TX 45 NC 56 CT, MA 44 x Links to these treatment facilities at EDcatalogue.com 40 • Request free copies of the 2015 Gürze/Salucore Eating Disorders Resource Catalogue TREATMENT FACILITIES MULTIPLE LOCATIONS The Nation’s First Residential Center for Women With Eating Disorders The Renfrew Renfrew Centers Centers provide clinical excellence within a nurturing environment - empowering women to change their lives. As the leader in the treatment and research of women’s eating disorders ers since 1985,, Renfr R ew has created a truly customized a pproach to r ecovery. CA C A ttCT CT t FL ttGA GA tt IL ttMA MA t MD t NJ t NY ttNC NC t PA t TN t TX 1-800-RENFREW (1-800-736-3739) ttwww.renfrewcenter.com www w.renfrewcenter.com 800-756-7533 • EDcatalogue.com • 41 MULTIPLE LOCATIONS HOW TO CHOOSE A M TREATMENT FACILITIES Treatment Provider ost individuals with bulimia should consider professional therapy. First and foremost, find someone who specializes in eating disorders. These are complex and multidimensional problems, and particular knowledge and experience is needed—not all professionals are trained in this field. Put in time and effort to find a therapist or treatment facility that is a good fit for you. Call their office and perhaps schedule an initial session or phone interview. Be prepared with a list of questions, and sense whether you feel good about their answers and you communicated well with each other. When you investigate therapy options, consider the following: • How much experience do they have treating eating disorders? • What is their clinical approach? • Do they focus on changing thought patterns and expressing feelings? • Do they give homework to keep clients engaged between sessions? • Do they work with other members of a treatment team? • How will team members be coordinated, and who will be the leader or point person for questions? • What if you need medication? • How often will you have sessions? • Will there be a support group? • How soon does the therapist expect to see results? • How long would they expect therapy to last? • What will the charges be, and will they accept your insurance? • Do they have a comfortable office? • Does the therapist seem kind and nonjudgmental? • Does the therapist answer you directly and invite you to express yourself? by Lindsey Hall and Leigh Cohn from Bulimia: A Guide to Recovery 42 • Request free copies of the 2015 Gürze/Salucore Eating Disorders Resource Catalogue TREATMENT FACILITIES MULTIPLE LOCATIONS 800-756-7533 • EDcatalogue.com • 43 MULTIPLE LOCATIONS TREATMENT FACILITIES 44 • Request free copies of the 2015 Gürze/Salucore Eating Disorders Resource Catalogue TREATMENT FACILITIES MULTIPLE LOCATIONS 800-756-7533 • EDcatalogue.com • 45 MULTIPLE LOCATIONS / ARIZONA TREATMENT FACILITIES 46 • Request free copies of the 2015 Gürze/Salucore Eating Disorders Resource Catalogue TREATMENT FACILITIES ARIZONA / CALIFORNIA 800-756-7533 • EDcatalogue.com • 47 CALIFORNIA TREATMENT FACILITIES 48 • Request free copies of the 2015 Gürze/Salucore Eating Disorders Resource Catalogue TREATMENT FACILITIES CALIFORNIA 800-756-7533 • EDcatalogue.com • 49 CALIFORNIA / COLORADO TREATMENT FACILITIES 50 • Request free copies of the 2015 Gürze/Salucore Eating Disorders Resource Catalogue TREATMENT FACILITIES COLORADO 800-756-7533 • EDcatalogue.com • 51 ILLINOIS TREATMENT FACILITIES 52 • Request free copies of the 2015 Gürze/Salucore Eating Disorders Resource Catalogue TREATMENT FACILITIES FLORIDA / LOUISIANA / MARYLAND 800-756-7533 • EDcatalogue.com • 53 MASSACHUSETTS TREATMENT FACILITIES 2015 CONFERENCES February 22 – 28, 2015 National Eating Disorders Awareness Week March 19 – 22, 2015 • Phoenix, AZ International Association of Eating Disorders Professionals Foundation Transformers: Clinicians as Agents of Change Quality Care in a Community Environment The Cambridge Eating Disorder Center provides individuals suffering with eating disorders a comprehensive continuum of support services focused on their recovery. Led by an experienced, multi-disciplinary team, clients receive individualized treatment across the complete spectrum including: Residential • Partial Hospital • Intensive Outpatient Outpatient • Transitional Living Located in vibrant, historic Harvard Square, CEDC fosters recovery in a comfortable, nurturing environment. 888.900.CEDC (2332) • info@cedcmail.org www.eatingdisordercenter.org 3 Bow Street • Cambridge, MA April 23 – 25, 2015 • Boston, MA Academy for Eating Disorders Communication: ICED Today and Tomorrow September 25, 2015 • Naperville, IL National Association of Anorexia Nervosa and Associated Disorders Wellness not Weight October 1 – 3, 2015 • San Diego, CA National Eating Disorders Association Sea Change: The Next Wave in Eating Disorder’s Treatment, Support, & Prevention November 13 – 15, 2015 • Philadelphia, PA The Renfrew Center Foundation Feminist Perspectives and Beyond: Honoring the Past, Embracing the Future: 25 Years Later 54 • Request free copies of the 2015 Gürze/Salucore Eating Disorders Resource Catalogue TREATMENT FACILITIES NEW JERSEY / NEW YORK 800-756-7533 • EDcatalogue.com • 55 NORTH CAROLINA / NORTH DAKOTA TREATMENT FACILITIES 56 • Request free copies of the 2015 Gürze/Salucore Eating Disorders Resource Catalogue TREATMENT FACILITIES OHIO / OKLAHOMA 800-756-7533 • EDcatalogue.com • 57 PENNSYLVANIA / SOUTH CAROLINA / TENNESSEE TREATMENT FACILITIES 58 • Request free copies of the 2015 Gürze/Salucore Eating Disorders Resource Catalogue TREATMENT FACILITIES TEXAS HOW LONG Does It Take to Recover? Recovery means different things to different people. I like to look at it as a process that begins by stopping the behaviors and balancing one’s chemistry, moves through an examination of the underlying mental, emotional, and spiritual issues, and evolves into feelings of integration, connection, and purpose. First, though, must come the motivation and readiness to change. People often ask whether I believe in full recovery. I say I do, because that term works for me. I haven’t binged in over thirty years, and don’t expect to ever again. Is this a guarantee? No, it’s not. What’s more, people who have practiced the abstinence approach might have the same successful track record, yet still call themselves, “recovering.” Perhaps this is just a case of semantics. If someone believes in their heart that they have made peace with food, that they love and appreciate their body, and they are comfortable with the hard-won “freedom” from obsession they have earned by whatever method, then they can call themselves anything they want! by Lindsey Hall and Leigh Cohn from Bulimia: A Guide to Recovery 800-756-7533 • EDcatalogue.com • 59 TEXAS / UTAH TREATMENT FACILITIES 60 • Request free copies of the 2015 Gürze/Salucore Eating Disorders Resource Catalogue TREATMENT FACILITIES WASHINGTON 800-756-7533 • EDcatalogue.com • 61 BOOK INDEX Title Primary Author 8 Keys to Recovery from an Eating Disorder Costin/Grabb 100 Questions & Answers About Anorexia Nervosa Shepphird Page Title 22 Primary Author Page Eat Q Albers 17 4 Eat What You Love, Love What You Eat May 18 18 50 Strategies to Sustain Recovery From Bulimia Golden 8 Eat What You Love, Love What You Eat for Binge Eating May/Anderson 50 Ways to Soothe Yourself Without Food Albers 18 Eating and it’s Disorders Fox/Goss 3 Acceptance & Commitment Therapy for Body Image Dissatisfaction Pearson 36 Eating Disorders: An Encyclopedia of Causes, Treatment, and Prevention Reel 3 Acceptance and Commitment Therapy for Eating Disorders Sandoz 36 Eating Disorders: The Ultimate Teen Guide (It Happened to Me Series) Greene 33 Adolescence and Body Image Ricciardelli/Yager 25 36 Thomas/Schaefer 4, 29 Eating Disorders, Addictions and Substance Use Disorders Brewerton/Dennis Almost Anorexic Anorexia Nervosa: A Guide to Recovery Hall/Ostroff DeSole 35 Anorexia Nervosa, Second Edition: A Recovery Guide for Sufferers, Families, and Friends Treasure/Alexander Eating Disorders and Mindfulness: Exploring Alternative Approaches to Treatment Anorexics and Bulimics Anonymous ABA Beautiful Girl: Celebrating the Wonders of Your Body Northrup/Tracey Beyond a Shadow of a Diet, Second Edition Big Disconnect Body Betrayed Body Image, Second Edition Matz/Frankel Steiner-Adair/Barker Zerbe Cash/Smolak 7 19 Eating Disorders and the Brain Lask/Frampton 36 Eating Disorders Clinical Pocket Guide, Second Edition Setnick 38 32 Eating Disorders in Children and Adolescents Le Grange 38 38 Eating Disorders on the Wire Friedman 31 34 Eating in the Light of the Moon Johnston 22 Eating to Lose Hunt 29 24 Ed Says U Said: Eating Disorder Translator Alexander/Sangster 19 —— 23 4 3 Body Image Workbook, Second Edition Cash 23 ED 101 (DVD) Body Image Survival Guide for Parents Warhaft-Nadler 12 Maine 28 Body Myth Maine/Kelly 28 Effective Clinical Practice in the Treatment of Eating Disorders Body Respect: What Conventional Health Books Get Wrong, Leave Out, and Just Plain Fail… Bacon/Aphramor 34 Embody: Learning to Love Your Unique Body Sobczak 17 Emotional Eater’s Repair Manual Simon 22 Body-States: Interpersonal and Relational Perspectives on the Treatment of Eating Disorders Petrucelli End Emotional Eating Taitz 11 Expressing Disorder (DVD) Alvarado 23 Brain Over Binge Hansen 8 Family Eating Disorders Manual Hill 14 Brave Girl Eating Brown 5 Father Hunger, Second Edition Maine 28 Bulimia: A Guide to Recovery Hall/Cohn 8 Food & Feelings Workbook Koenig 23 Bulimia Workbook for Teens Schab 33 Food to Eat Lieberman/Sangster 16 By Her Side: Eating Disorders and the Joy of Recovery for Young Women Schone/Evans 14 Finding Your Voice through Creativity Jacobson-Levy 23 French Toast for Breakfast Cohen 21 Can I Tell You About Eating Disorders? A Guide for Friends, Family and Professionals Lask/Watson 33 Full: How One Woman Found Yoga, Eased Her Inner Hunger, and Started Loving Herself Simpkins 24 Chasing Silhouettes Wierenga 26 Full Mouse Empty Mouse Zeckhausen 32 Clinician’s Guide to Binge Eating Disorder Alexander 38 Girl Called Tim Alexander 31 36 Cognitive Behavior Therapy and Eating Disorders Fairburn 36 Girl Lost: Finding Your Voice Through ED Recovery Moore 33 Cognitive Remediation Therapy (CRT) for Eating and Weight Disorders Tchanturia 36 Good Parenting Food Guide Ogden 34 Goodbye Ed, Hello Me Schaefer 29 Collaborative Approach to Eating Disorders Alexander 38 Healing Eating Disorders with Psychodrama and… Carnabucci/Ciotola 35 Comprehensive Learning Teaching Handout Series for Eating Disorders Kronberg 16 Healing Journey for Binge Eating Journal Market 10 Current Findings on Males With Eating Disorders Cohn/Lemberg 36 Healing Journey for Binge Eating, Volume One Market 10 Dancing Through It: My Journey in the Ballet Ringer 31 Health at Every Size Bacon 21 Decoding Anorexia: How Breakthroughs in Science Offer Hope for Eating Disorders Arnold 4 Healthy Bodies (curriculum) Kater 34 Healthy Habits: The Program plus Food Guide Index… Cipullo 34 Dialectical Behavior Therapy Skills Workbook for Bulimia Astrachan-Fletcher 9 Hope, Help, & Healing for Eating Disorders Jantz 26 How I Look Journal, Fifth Edition Dellheim 33 12 How to Disappear Completely Osgood Hungry i: A Workbook for Partners of Men with Eating Disorders Lawrence Does Every Woman Have an Eating Disorder? Rosenfeld Doing What Works Natenshon 38 Dr. Deah’s Calmanac Schwartz 25 62 • Request free copies of the 2015 Gürze/Salucore Eating Disorders Resource Catalogue 7 23 BOOK INDEX Title Primary Author Page Title Primary Author Images of His Beauty Steel 26 Integrated Treatment of Eating Disorders Zerbe 38 Intuitive Eating Tribole/Resch 17 Lasagna for Lunch Cohen 21 Life Beyond Your Eating Disorder Kandel 20 Life Without Ed, 10th Anniversary Edition Schaefer/Rutledge 29 Living with Your Body & Other Things You Hate Sandoz/DuFrene 24 Love Your Body, Love Your Life Maria Page Reclaiming Yourself from Binge Eating: A Step-by-Step Guide to Healing Fulvio 11 Recovering: Anorexia Nervosa and Bulimia Nervosa (DVD) —— 23 Recovery from Eating Disorders: A Guide for Clinicians and Their Clients Noordenbos 38 Reflections of Body Image in Art Therapy Hunter 35 26 Reflections of Me: Girls and Body Image (What’s the Issue?) Hirschmann 33 18 Maintaining Recovery from Eating Disorders Feigenbaum 22 Reinventing the Meal Somov Making Peace with Your Plate Cruze/Andrus 20 Religion of Thinness Lelwica 26 Making Weight Andersen 22 Remembering Judith Joseph 31 Man Up to Eating Disorders Walen 30 Restoring Our Bodies, Reclaiming Our Lives Liu 20 Midlife Eating Disorders Bulik 21 Ritteroo Journal for Eating Disorders Recovery Hall/Ritter 23 Mindful Eating Bays 18 Rules of “Normal” Eating Koenig 18 Mindfulness & Acceptance Workbook for Bulimia Sandoz 9 Second Son Sallans 30 Mindsight: The New Science of Personal Transformation Siegel 18 Secrets of Feeding a Healthy Family, Second Edition Satter 12 Mirror, Mirror Off the Wall Gruys 25 Shattered Image Cuban 30 My Feet Aren’t Ugly Beck 33 Slender Trap Stern 24 My Kid Is Back Alexander/Le Grange 19 Someday Melissa (DVD) —— 23 My Name is Caroline, Second Edition Miller My Thinning Years: Starving the Gay Within Croteau New Developments in Anorexia Nervosa Research Gramaglia/Zeppegno 8 30 4 Something Spectacular Gleissner 31 Speaking Out About ED (DVD) —— 23 Spiritual Approaches in the Treatment of Women With Eating Disorders Richards 27 Nice Girls Finish Fat Koenig 18 Starting Monday Koenig 20 Night Eating Syndrome Lundgren 36 Goldwasser 26 No “Body” is Perfect Folcik 32 Starving Souls: A Spiritual Guide to Understanding Eating Disorders—Anorexia, Bulimia, Binging… Nutrition Counseling in the Treatment of Eating Disorders, Second Edition Herrin/Larkin 38 Stone Girl Sheinmel 33 11 Friedman 31 Stop Eating Your Heart Out:The 21-Day Program to Free Yourself from Emotional Eating Beck On the Wire (Music CD) Outsmarting Overeating: Boost Your Life Skills, End Food Problems Koenig 10 Surviving an Eating Disorder: Strategies for Family and Friends Siegel 14 26 Overcoming Binge Eating, Second Edition Fairburn 10 Table in the Darkness Blum Overcoming Body Dysmorphic Disorder Neziroglu 18 Telling Ed No! Kerrigan 21 Overcoming Bulimia Workbook McCabe 9 Ten-Mile Morning Lamparello 30 Overcoming Eating Disorders, Second Edition: Therapist Guide Agras/Apple 36 Treatment Manual for Anorexia Nervosa, Second Edition: A Family-Based Approach Lock/LeGrange 38 Overcoming Your Eating Disorder, Second Edition: Workbook Apple/Agras 36 Treatment of Eating Disorders: Bridging the Research-Practice Gap Maine 28 Oxford Handbook of Child and Adolescent Eating Disorders Lock Treatment Plans and Interventions for Bulimia and Binge Eating Disorder Zweig/Leahy 38 3 Parent’s Guide to Eating Disorders: Second Edition Herrin/Matsumoto 14 Ultimate Tween Survival Guide Zeckhausen 33 Parents’ Quick Start Recovery Guide Osachy 14 Glovsky 36 Peoplescapes: My Story from Purging to Painting Calef/Weiner 29 Wellness Not Weight: Health at Every Size and Motivational Interviewing Phoenix, Tennessee (Music CD) Schaefer 29 When Anorexia Came to Visit Mattocks Please Eat…A Mother’s Struggle to Free Her Teenage Son from Anorexia Mattocks 5 When Food is Family Scheel Positively Caroline: How I Beat Bulimia for Good… and Found Real Happiness Miller 8 PR: A Personal Record of Running from Anorexia Sayer 31 Predatory Lies of Anorexia: A Survivor’s Story Kelly 26 4 14 Woman in the Mirror Bulik 25 Women, Food and God: An Unexpected Path to Almost Everything Roth 26 You Can’t Just Eat a Cheeseburger Duppong 20 Your Dieting Daughter, Second Edition Costin 14 800-756-7533 • EDcatalogue.com • 63 National Eating Disorders Organizations Links for these organizations at EDcatalogue.com Maudsley Parents • maudsleyparents.org Academy for Eating Disorders — AED aedweb.org • 847-498-4274 For ED professionals; promotes effective treatment, develops prevention initiatives, stimulates research, sponsors international conference and regional workshops Volunteer organization of parents who have used family-based treatment to help their children recover Mothers Against ED—MAED facebook.com/groups/debrahope3/ • 650-773-2253 FaceBook Support Group Binge Eating Disorder Association — BEDA bedaonline.com • 855-855-2332 Multi-Service Eating Disorders Association, Inc.—MEDA medainc.org • 617-558-1881/Toll-free: 866-343-MEDA (6332) Education, annual conference, resources, research, and best-practice guidelines for preventing and treating BED Newsletter, referral network, local support groups, educational seminars and trainings, speaker series Eating Disorders Anonymous — EDA eatingdisordersanonymous.org National Association for Males with Eating Disorders—N.A.M.E.D. namedinc.org A Fellowship of individuals interested in pursuing recovery and helping others do the same; meetings, materials, and online chat room Info, resources, and support for males with Eating Disorders and their families Eating Disorders Coalition for Research, Policy & Action — EDC eatingdisorderscoalition.org • 202-543-9570 National Association of Anorexia Nervosa and Associated Disorders— ANAD • ANAD.org • 630-577-1333/Helpline: 630-577-1330 Advances the federal recognition of ED as a public health priority Listing of therapists and hospitals; informative materials; sponsors support groups, conference, research, and a crisis hotline Eating Disorders Information Network— EDIN myedin.org • 404-816-EDIN (3346) Resources and referrals; speakers bureau, curricula, school outreach programs, EDAW events The Elisa Project theelisaproject.org • 214-369-5222 The National Eating Disorders Screening Program—NEDSP mentalhealthscreening.org • 781-239-0071 Eating Disorders screening, education, and outreach programs National Eating Disorders Association—NEDA nationaleatingdisorders.org • 212-575-6200/Helpline: 800-931-2237 Listing of therapists, treatment centers, and informative materials; annual symposium, newsletter, support groups Families Empowered and Supporting Treatment of Eating Disorders— F.E.A.S.T. • Feast-ed.org • 855-50-FEAST (33278) International organization for parents and caregivers; information and support for evidence-based treatment and advocacy International Association of Eating Disorders Professionals—IAEDP iaedp.com • 800-800-8126 A nonprofit membership organization for professionals; provides certification, education, local chapters, newsletter, annual symposium Sponsors National Eating Disorders Awareness Week in February with a network of volunteers; annual conference, Parents, Family & Friends Network, NEDA Navigators, Helpline, and Media Watchdog Program Overeaters Anonymous—OA oa.org • 505-891-2664 A 12-step, self-help Fellowship; free local meetings and support Project HEAL: Help to Eat, Accept & Live theprojectheal.org • 917-538-5748 Provides grant funding for people with Eating Disorders who cannot afford treatment; promotes healthy body image and self-esteem EDcatalogue.com A full-resource website to learn about Eating Disorders, featuring: • Complete articles about Anorexia, Bulimia, Binge Eating, and more • Over 350 books and DVDs with full descriptions • Links to Eating Disorders Organizations and Treatment Facilities • Special Offers and News ABOUT the PAINTINGS The pages from this catalogue are filled with details from Francesca Droll’s pastel paintings. Please visit FrancescaDroll.com to see more. Artwork ©2015 Francesca Droll EDcatalogue.com 800-756-7533 Salucore This catalogue is printed on recycled paper with at least 10% postconsumer waste.