Title: Early Intervention
1Early Intervention Innovative Treatment for
Adolescents with Eating Disorders
- Steven F. Crawford, M.D.
- Center for Eating Disorders
- at Sheppard Pratt
2Educational Objectives
- Define the syndromes
- Recognize the Importance of Early Intervention
- Review the History of Family Therapy in the
Treatment of Eating Disorders - Family Based Treatment (The Maudsley Approach)
3Importance of Appearance
- 1973 Survey
- 29 Men
- 32 Women
-
- 1993 Survey
- 63 Men
- 68 Women
4Drive For Thinness
- 80 American women report dissatisfaction with
their appearance - Gaesser survey 50 of females between the ages
of 18-25 would prefer to be run over by a truck
then be fat 66 would rather be mean or stupid - 40 women and 20 men would trade 3-5 years of
their life to achieve goal body weight
5Drive For Thinness
- 42 of 1st-3rd grade girls want to be thinner
- 81 of 10 yr olds are afraid of being fat
6Dieting
- 91 of college-aged women diet
- 25 American men and 45 American women are on a
diet on any given day - 48 billion dollars spent each year on dieting
products/programs
7Dieting
- Over 50 teen girls and 33 teen boys use
unhealthy weight control behaviors such as
skipping meals, fasting, smoking cigarettes,
vomiting, or taking laxatives - 51 9-10 yr old girls diet
- 82 9-10 yr old girls report someone in their
family is on a diet - Age of first diet
- 1970 14 yrs old
- 1990 8 yrs old
8Dieting
- 95 of all dieters regain their lost weight in
1-5 years - 35 of normal dieters progress to pathological
dieting - Most common behavior preceding onset of an eating
disorder is dieting
9Eating Disorders
- Anorexia Nervosa
- Bulimia Nervosa
- Binge Eating Disorder
10History of Anorexia Nervosa
- Richard Morton (1689) First recognized anorexia
nervosa and described nervous consumption. - Gull and Leségue (late 19th century)
Independently described what is now recognized as
modern anorexia nervosa.
11Anorexia Nervosa
- Refusal to maintain body weight at or above a
minimally normal weight for age and height - Intense fear of weight gain or becoming fat, even
though underweight - Disturbance in the way in which ones body weight
or shape is experienced, undue influence of body
weight or shape on self-evaluation, or denial of
the seriousness of the current low body weight - Amenorrhea for 3 consecutive months
12Anorexia Nervosa Subtyping
Restricting Type
- Binge-Eating
- Purging
- Type
13AN - Epidemiology
- Prevalence is estimated at 0.5 - 3.7 of
populations at highest risk (adolescent females) - Femalemale ratio 101
- Significantly higher rates if sub-threshold EDNOS
cases are included - Incidence in young women has tripled in last 40
years
14AN Epidemiology
- 40 of newly identified cases are in girls 15-19
yrs old - Increase in incidence of anorexia in women ages
15-19 in each decade since 1930 - Childhood anorexia (lt10 yrs old) is relatively
rare but increasing
15AN - Medical Consequences
- Metabolic down-regulation - bradycardia,
orthostatic hypotension, hypothermia, syncope - Dehydration, cardiac changes, arrhythmia
- Gastric disturbances, constipation
- Osteopenia/Osteoporosis
- Anemia, leukopenia, electrolyte disturbances
- Growth retardation
16AN - Social Consequences
- Profound impact on interpersonal relationships
and family - Decreased rates of marriage and fertility
- Diminished achievement in school and occupation
relative to potential - High dependence on health care system at
extremely high cost (second only to schizophrenia)
17AN - Outcome
- About 60 improve with focused treatment
- About 20 remain morbidly and chronically ill
- Long term follow up studies suggest that
mortality is approx. 5-10 per decade of illness - Average mortality of chronic cases is 8-13
- Suicide accounts for about 1/2 mortality
- Highest mortality of any psychiatric illness
18AN - Outcome
- About 50 develop bulimic symptoms
- Depression and anxiety disorders develop in a
majority of the morbidly ill - Long term outcome has few reliable predictors
- Short-term outcome is worse in persons with
laxative abuse, bingeing, and familial
psychopathology
19AN - Outcomes
- Third most common chronic illness among
adolescents - 12 times more likely to die than other women same
age without anorexia nervosa
20History of Bulimia Nervosa
- Description of bulimic symptoms in literature
since 1873 - Case of Ellen West (1944) first well documented
account - Gerald Russell (1979) Landmark description of
bulimia nervosa
21Bulimia Nervosa
- Recurrent episodes of binge eating
- Regular compensatory measures to prevent weight
gain - Occurrence at least twice per week for three
months - Attitude about body shape predominantly
influences self evaluation - No evidence of anorexia nervosa
22Bulimia Nervosa Subtyping
Non-purging
Purging
23BN- Epidemiology
- Lifetime prevalence is estimated at 1.1-4.2 of
females - Up to 19 of college-aged women in America are
bulimic - Femalemale ratio 101
- 84 have a college education
- Incidence tripled between 88-93 in 10-39 yr old
women
24BN - Epidemiology
- Age of onset between mid-adolescence and late
20s - Girls that diet are 12 times more likely to start
binge-eating than their peers that do not diet - Up to 3 adolescent boys and 10 adolescent girls
purge one time per week
25BN - Epidemiology
- Children as young as 6 yrs old have been
diagnosed with bulimia - Approximately 4.5 of ALL American high school
students have vomited or used laxatives as a
means to lose weight within the last 30 days
26BN - Medical Complications
- Electrolyte disturbances - hypokalemia
- Orthostatic hypotension
- Esophageal tear (Mallory-Weiss)
- Gastritis, gastric dilation, rupture
- Cardiac arrhythmias
- Menstrual irregularities
- Osteopenia
- Sudden death
27BN - Outcome
- Treatment response is highly variable
- 50 recover, 30 demonstrate improvement, 20
continue to meet full diagnostic criteria - 10 meet criteria after 10 years
- Longer duration of the disorder at presentation
and history of substance use disorder predicted
worse outcome
28Binge-Eating DisorderDSM-IV-TR Research Criteria
- Recurrent episodes of binge-eating
- Marked distress regarding binge-eating
- Occurrence at least two days per week for six
months - Not associated with the regular use of
inappropriate compensatory measures
29Binge Eating Disorder
- Lifetime prevalence rate is 1-5
- One study showed 3 current population meet
criteria for BED - Onset usually occurs during late adolescence or
in the early 20s - 40 are male
30Classification
EDNOS
Binge-eating disorder
Anorexia nervosa
Bulimia nervosa
31The Anorexogenic Family
- Lasegue portrayed a relatively neutral view of
parents - Gull recommended limiting parental-child contact
during treatment to prevent enabling behaviors of
parents - Charcot considered parents to be particularly
pernicious
32The Anorexogenic Family
- View that parents were a hindrance to treatment
and that the family environment had contributory
role in development of illness persisted in first
half of 20th century - Recommendations for treatment usually included a
parentectomy
33The Psychosomatic Family
- In 1960s, major shift to identifying family
mechanisms which may contribute to development of
AN and could be targeted by treatment - Bruch, Palazzoli and Minuchin were primary
contributors
34The Psychosomatic Family
- Minuchin placed emphasis on pathological
interactive familial processes in the
pathogenesis of AN - Focused on rigidity, enmeshment, over-involvement
and conflict avoidance - Childs role in family was to serve as a
go-between in cross-generational alliances
35The Psychosomatic Family
- A no blame on the parents model
- Advocated for family therapy to alter the
family structure - Critical shift was the engaging of the family in
the treatment process
36AN Risk Factor Research Cross-Sectional Studies
- Inappropriate parental pressures
- Early-life overprotection
- Greater incidence of separation, arguments,
criticism, high expectations, over-involvement,
under-involvement, low affection
37BN Risk Factor Research Cross-Sectional Studies
- Parental indifference
- Family discord
- Lack of parental care
- Greater adversity
- Significant greater change in family structure
(e.g. a parent leaving or a step-parent entering
the family) the year before onset of the illness
38Risk Factor ResearchCross-Sectional Studies
- Findings are inconsistent
- Growing support that families are heterogeneous
group with respect to socio-demographic
characteristics, family relationships, etc.
39Current Focus
- Current understanding is a shift away from
evaluating the family as a cause of the eating
disorder to evaluating family dynamics that may
develop in the context of an eating disorder and
may function as maintenance mechanisms
40The Maudsley Approach Family Based Treatment
(FBT)
- Developed by a team of child and adolescent
psychiatrists at the Maudsley Hospital in London - Assist the parents in their efforts to help their
adolescent in recovery from AN so that he/she can
return to normal adolescent development
41The Maudsley Approach Family Based Treatment
(FBT)
- 66 of adolescents are recovered at the end of
FBT - 75-90 are fully weight recovered at five year
follow-up - Young patients with AN require on average no more
than 20 treatment sessions over the course of 6
to 12 months, with 80 being weight restored with
resumption of menses
42Principles of Family Based Treatment (FBT)
- Parents are viewed as the most useful resource in
their childs treatment - Parents play an active and vital role in the
recovery process and in restoring their childs
weight
43Principles of Family Based Treatment (FBT)
- The adolescent is viewed as incapacitated in
terms of eating behaviors with an inability to
maintain an optimal weight for age and height - Focus of FBT is on current eating disorder
symptoms and not underlying issues
44Family Based TreatmentRole of the Therapist
- Coach, a consultant to the parents
- Empowers the parents to develop strategies to
manage the anorexia and ways to help feed their
child until weight restoration is achieved - Directs conversation towards parents building a
strong alliance
45Family Based TreatmentRole of the Therapist
- Encourages sibling support and understanding
- Teaches the family to externalize the illness,
modeling a no-blame approach with recognition
that the eating disorder behaviors are mostly
outside the control of the adolescent
46Family Based TreatmentThree Phases
- Phase 1 Weight Restoration
- Phase 2 Returning Control Over Eating to the
Adolescent - Phase 3 Establishing Healthy Adolescent Identity
47Weight Restoration
- Parents are supported in their efforts to restore
their adolescents weight - Parents are encouraged to present a united front
- Parents monitor meals and snacks while
restricting physical activity - Therapist conveys message that parents will
succeed
48Weight Restoration
- Therapist conveys to adolescent message that
while he/she has many fears about weight gain,
these fears cannot deflect parents efforts toward
weight restoration - Weight restoration takes precedence over almost
any other issue until self-starvation has been
reversed
49Returning Control to the Adolescent
- Begins when adolescent has reached 90 of ideal
body weight and is eating without much resistance - Process is gradual and age dependent
50Establishing Healthy Adolescent Identity
- Begins when adolescent has achieved a healthy
weight for age and height - Treatment focused on general issues of adolescent
development and ways in which the eating disorder
impacted this process - Goals are increased personal autonomy,
relationships with peers, or getting ready to
leave home for the first time
51Establishing Healthy Adolescent Identity
- Final stages of treatment focus on relapse
prevention strategies - Identification and recognition of early warning
signs for a developing relapse - Family responses to potential relapse outlined
and an action plan developed