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The Parent's Guide to Eating Disorders shows that effective
solutions begin at home and cost little more than a healthy
investment of time, effort, and love. Based on exciting new
research, it differs from similar books in several key ways.
Instead of concentrating on the grim, expensive hospital stays of
patients with severe disorders, the authors focus on the family,
teaching parents how to examine and understand their family’s
approach to food and body-image issues and its effect their
child’s behavior. Parents learn to identify an eating disorder
early, to establish healthy attitudes toward food at a young age,
and to intervene in a nonthreatening, nonjudgmental way. The
authors concentrate on teens, the age group most often affected by
eating disorders, as well as younger children. Individual chapters
cover boys at risk, relapse training, dealing with friends, school,
and summer camp, and much more. The book includes an appendix and
sections on further reading, organizations and websites,
residential and hospital programs, and references.
Marcia Herrin and Maria Larkin have collaborated on the second
edition of Nutrition Counseling in the Treatment of Eating
Disorders, infusing research-based approaches and their own
clinically-refined tools for managing food and weight-related
issues. New to this edition is a section on nutrition counseling
interventions derived from cognitive behavioral therapy-enhanced,
dialectical behavioral therapy, family-based treatment, and
motivational interviewing techniques. Readers will appreciate the
state of the art nutrition and weight assessment guidelines, the
practical clinical techniques for managing bingeing, purging,
excessive exercise, and weight restoration as well as the unique
food planning approach developed by the authors. As a comprehensive
overview of food and weight-related treatments, this book is an
indispensible resource for nutrition counselors, psychotherapists,
psychiatrists, physicians, and primary care providers.
Marcia Herrin and Maria Larkin have collaborated on the second
edition of Nutrition Counseling in the Treatment of Eating
Disorders, infusing research-based approaches and their own
clinically-refined tools for managing food and weight-related
issues. New to this edition is a section on nutrition counseling
interventions derived from cognitive behavioral therapy-enhanced,
dialectical behavioral therapy, family-based treatment, and
motivational interviewing techniques. Readers will appreciate the
state of the art nutrition and weight assessment guidelines, the
practical clinical techniques for managing bingeing, purging,
excessive exercise, and weight restoration as well as the unique
food planning approach developed by the authors. As a comprehensive
overview of food and weight-related treatments, this book is an
indispensible resource for nutrition counselors, psychotherapists,
psychiatrists, physicians, and primary care providers.
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