Medical Health Encyclopedia

Eating Disorders - Therapy

(Page 2)




Family Therapy

Because of the major role family attitudes play in eating disorders, one of the first steps in treating the patient with early-onset anorexia is to also treat the family. Family therapy can be useful for both younger and older patients.

If the patient is hospitalized, experts recommend that family therapy start after the patient has gained weight, but before discharge. It should usually continue after the patient has left the hospital.

The feelings of intense guilt and anxiety that caregivers experience are probably similar to those produced by living with a person who is suicidal. An over-involved parent may even support the patient's eating disorder for various reasons:




  • Some parents may be afraid of releasing some underlying anger or grief directed at the patient.
  • Other parents may identify with the goal of thinness and not even perceive that their child is unhealthily underweight.

In such cases, it is extremely important that the family members fully understand the danger of this disorder and that they are collaborating in their child's illness, or even death, by encouraging this state.



Review Date: 12/13/2006
Reviewed By: Harvey Simon, MD, Associate Professor of Medicine, Harvard Medical School; Physician, Massachusetts General Hospital.

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