Title: Mentalising and eating disorders
1Mentalising and eating disorders
Professor Finn Skårderud Lillehammer University
College Oslo University Hospital
2Eating disorders as disorders of the self
3To describe
- The phenomenology of eating disorders
- Psychopathology
- Self- and affect dysregulation
- Symptoms as repair and compensation
- Concreteness of symptoms
4Reflective function
The Cassel hospital study (Fonagy et al., 1996)
5Examples from Reading the Mind in the Eyes
(Baron-Cohen et al., 2001)
surprised
Sure about something
joking
happy
6Examples from Reading the Mind in the Eyes
(Baron-Cohen et al., 2001)
friendly
sad
worried
surprised
7www.autismresearchcentre.com/tests
8Hilde Bruch revisited and revised
- Descriptions
- Deficient sense of self
- Wide range of deficits in conceptual
developments, body image and awareness, and
individuation - Cognitive and perceptual disorder, interoceptive
confusion - Alexithymia
- Theory Parents misinterpreation and mislabeling
of the childs emotional states - (Skårderud, F, 2009. Bruch revisited and revised.
European Eating Disorders Review, 17, 83-88)
9Modes of psychic reality
- Psychic equivalence
- Mind-world isomorphism mental reality outer
reality - Intolerance of alternative perspectives
- Self-related negative cognitions and emotions are
too real - The very hearth of severe eating disorders and
self harm
10The plate of control
- The idea of mixing different types of food
scares me. The sight of too many types of food on
my plate, and the idea of them mixed together in
my stomach induce in me a sense of chaos. - I have to have control of my plate to have
control in my life. - I gradually understood that taking control over
food was a way to take control over my
overwhelming worries, my restlessness, all my
anxieties about myself and simply my need to be
somebody. - Elisabeth, 26
11Modes of psychic reality
- Pretend mode
- Ideas form no bridge between inner and outer
reality mental world decoupled from external
reality affects that do not acompany thoughts - Linked with emptiness, meaninglessness and
dissociation in the wake of trauma - In therapy endless inconsequential talk of
thoughts and feelings - Combined with the patients overcompensations in
skills and social relations, this may confuse
therapists
12 Modes of psychic reality
- Teleological stance
- Expectations concerning the agency of the other
are present but these are formulated in terms
restricted to the physical world - Patients cannot accept anything other than a
modification in the realm of the physical as a
true index of the intentions of the other. - Eating disorders and self harm precisely
illustrates this
13Opaqueness of feelings
- Applied on eating disorders and self harm when
psychic reality is poorly integrated, the body
may take on an excessively central role for the
continuity of the sense of self. Not being able
to feel themselves from within, they are forced
to experience the self from without
14(No Transcript)
15- But he said to them Unless I see the nail marks
in his hands and put my finger where the nails
were, and put my hand into his side, I will not
believe it. - John 20 25
16Treatment implications
17Mentalisation-based therapy
- Stimulating the attentiveness to mind
- Tailoring treatment to the actual
pscychopathology and impairment of mentalising - Practising mentalising in an attachment bond
18Therapeutic stance
- Not-knowing stance
- Active
- Open-minded To be a role-model
- Avoid absolute certainty
- Accept different perspectives
- Check out your understanding
- Regulate intensity in therapeutic relation
19Interventions
- Simple sound-bite
- Focus on patients mind (not on behaviour)
- Relate to current event or activity
- Here-and now
- Affect focused (love, desire, hurt, catastrophe,
excitement)
20- To these patients, receiving interpretations
represents in a painful way a re-experience of
being told what to feel and think, confirming
their sense of inadequacy and thus interfering
with the development of a true self-awareness and
trust in their own psychological abilities - (Bruch, 1985)
21Embodied mentalisation
- Focus on identifying, differientiating,
tolerating and expressing affects - Explicit focus on embodiment of affects
- Focus on the translations between affects and
bodily behaviour and sensations - Translate back from body to tolerated affects
22The Oslo Psychotherapy project
- Format is combined therapy
- Weekly group therapy
- Weekly individual therapy
- Dietist
- Psychoeducation in group
- Mentalising, misunderstandings, affects,
nutrition, body awareness, cognitive deficits - Network of supervision workshops
- Educational programs in Scandinavian languages
and also English - Cooperation with Peter Fonagy and Anthony
Bateman, London - Currently working on Mentalisation-based
treatment for eating disorders Practical guide