Friday, July 17, 2020

Can Self-Help Help My Eating Disorder

Can Self-Help Help My Eating Disorder Eating Disorders Treatment Print Self-Help for Treating Your Eating Disorder By Lauren Muhlheim, PsyD, CEDS facebook twitter linkedin Lauren Muhlheim, PsyD, is a certified eating disorders expert and clinical psychologist who provides cognitive behavioral psychotherapy. Learn about our editorial policy Lauren Muhlheim, PsyD, CEDS Medically reviewed by Medically reviewed by Steven Gans, MD on August 31, 2015 Steven Gans, MD is board-certified in psychiatry and is an active supervisor, teacher, and mentor at Massachusetts General Hospital. Learn about our Medical Review Board Steven Gans, MD Updated on November 20, 2019 Tetra Images, Getty Images More in Eating Disorders Treatment Symptoms Diagnosis Awareness and Prevention Specialized treatment for eating disorders is expensive and can be hard to find. The good news: if you have bulimia nervosa, binge eating disorder, or subclinical versions of either of these, self-help may bridge the gap. Research shows self-help can be beneficial. Through the use of a manual, workbook, or smartphone or web-based platform, you can work through a series of steps to learn about your problem and develop skills to overcome and manage the disorder. Self-help, however, is not recommended for anorexia nervosa given the special medical needs of patients with this disorder. Not all self-help is equally effective. The enhanced version of cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT-E) is the most effective treatment for individuals with bulimia and binge eating disorder; outcome studies show that approximately 65% of people recover after 20 sessions of psychotherapy. Self-help approaches based on CBT have been the most studied. Pure Self-Help and Guided Self-Help In pure self-help, the patient works through the material entirely independent of the guidance of a professional. In contrast, guided self-help consists of self-help plus the support of another person or facilitator who may not be a professional eating disorder therapist. This support person can be, for example, a lay person or recovered person; support can be delivered in a variety of formats, such as in-person, over the phone, by text message, or over the internet.  The frequency of support can vary but is usually less intensive than weekly psychotherapy.   Pure self-help and guided self-help for eating disorders have proven effective for subsets of individuals with bulimia nervosa, binge eating disorder, and OSFED (Other Specified Feeding Eating Disorder). Of these, there is the most support for its use among individuals with binge eating disorder.   There is more support for guided self-help than pure self-help.  Self-help has also been shown to be superior to no treatment.   In 2013, Rutgers University’s Counseling Center began routinely offering guided self-help for eating disorders after a graduate student’s research proved this was a feasible and effective model. In a two-year study Zandberg, the student, trained a group of seven graduate psychology students who in turn provided guided self-help treatment to 38 students diagnosed with either bulimia nervosa or binge eating disorder. The support, which was based on cognitive behavioral therapy principles, was offered in ten 25-minute sessions. At the end of the 12-week program, 42 percent of the subjects experienced no binge episodes and 63 percent no longer met criteria for an eating disorder. Should You Try Self-Help? Not everyone needs a full course of individual therapy to recover from binge eating disorder, bulimia, and other forms of disordered eating.  Researchers have proposed that individuals who have eating disorders start with the least-intensive appropriate treatment and then progress to more intensive treatments if there is no improvement. In this stepped-care model, the starting point is self-help. Self-help for eating disorders may be especially beneficial for those who cannot find a specialist provider or for those who have difficulty accessing treatment due to cost, location, or other barriers. Compared to other treatments, self-help is cost-effective.  It is also flexible and can be done on one’s own time. If you are underweight, have recently lost a significant amount of weight, or are diagnosed with anorexia nervosa or similar problems, self-help is not recommended â€" it is imperative that you seek professional help. If you are experiencing disordered eating, binge eating disorder or bulimia nervosa, it is best to start by seeking medical and professional mental health treatment. However, if specialized treatment is not available and your problem is not severe, you may want to start with one of the resources below.  Even if you are in some sort of treatment, you may want to consider one of the self-help resources as an adjunct; though it’s a good idea to discuss recovery-oriented books with your treatment team. Most clinical trials for eating disorders (regardless of treatment studied) show that if there is no improvement by week 4, the individual is less likely to benefit from that treatment. Thus, if after giving self-help a try, you are not showing progress by week 4, you should seek additional help or a higher level of treatment. A Word From Verywell Keep in mind that recovery from an eating disorder takes work. Set aside time to focus on recovery. Recognize that when you begin to address problems it is common to feel worse before you begin to feel better. Reach out to your support system. It is important to remember that many individuals do not make a full recovery with self-help interventions alone. This is not a reason to feel ashamed. Eating disorders are pernicious and sometimes intractable illnesses and other treatments are often necessary.   Recommended Reading Overcoming Binge Eating (Fairburn, 1995), a truncated version of CBT-E treatment, is the self-help manual most frequently used in randomized controlled trials of guided self-help. It has demonstrated effectiveness for bulimia nervosa, binge eating disorder, and EDNOS (eating disorder not otherwise specified, the predecessor diagnosis to OSFED) across multiple studies. An updated version was published in 2013.  Overcoming Binge Eating has two sections. The first contains psycho-education about eating disorders and the second a six-step self-help program. Each step includes specific homework tasks (e.g. self-monitoring, regular eating, problem-solving) and checklists that allow participants to monitor their progress.Overcoming Disordered Eating â€" Part A and Overcoming Disordered Eating â€" Part B comprise a self-help program available free for download for users worldwide through the Center for Clinical Interventions (CCI) of Western Australia.  CCI workbooks, made available as user- friendly pdf files, address a number of mental health disorders.  The eating disorder workbooks also closely follow the evidence-based CBT-E protocol.Overcoming Your Eating Disorder: A Cognitive-Behavioral Therapy Approach for Bulimia Nervosa and Binge-Eating Disorder, Guided Self Help Workbook.  This workbook also closely follows the CBT treatment manual for bulimia and binge-eating.