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Teens With Eating Disorders Benefit From Parents' Help


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Another study, published in the journal Eating Disorders, followed 32 teenage girls with anorexia and found that 75 percent of them were in full remission three years after treatment that had included family therapy.

Just what does the treatment, generally known as behavioral family therapy, involve?

"The therapist works with the family to empower the family to get the [anorectic] child to eat the meals and recover the weight," Bermudez said. "The family becomes the agent of change."

Text Continues Below



He said that the approach has been studied more in anorexia than in bulimia but that it is used for both.

In bulimia, the parents' role at home would be to get their teen to eat regular meals so the teen doesn't binge then purge, Bermudez said.

It doesn't always work, he said, but it is generally viewed as promising and effective.

The approach did work for the daughter of Deborah, a 50-something mother in Orlando, Fla. She and her husband were stunned when their daughter, Allison, now 25, told them she needed help. "She had lost a lot of weight," Deborah recalled.

They sought help and participated in a family-centered treatment approach. "I was in the counseling session with Allison and the therapist," Deborah recalled. It helped her understand the disorder, she said, and how better to help.

But Deborah did much more than sit in the counseling sessions. "We built a team around Allison," she said. Besides the therapist, the team included the family doctor, a nutritionist, Allison and her parents.

Parents can take other steps to help a teen recover from an eating disorder. Suggestions include:

  • Educate yourself. "I would sit up at night and read," Deborah said, "so I could understand Allison and what she was experiencing."
  • Be there emotionally. For her daughter, Deborah recalled, knowing that she could count on her parents' aid and support helped a great deal.
  • Don't be in denial. If you suspected your child had cancer, Bermudez asked, wouldn't you get help immediately? It's just as crucial for a suspected eating disorder.
  • Follow directions."Listen to your treatment team," Bermudez tells parents. The best treatment plans are individualized.

Allison's family-centered treatment, begun at the start of her senior year in high school, was successful. In college, she began to speak on the topic and now heads up the junior board of directors for the National Eating Disorders Association.

More information

The National Eating Disorders Association has more for parents of teens with eating disorders.

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Copyright © 2009 ScoutNews, LLC. All rights reserved.
Last updated 6/26/2009

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SOURCES: Deborah, Orlando, Fla.; Ovidio Bermudez, M.D., medical director, eating disorders program, Laureate Psychiatric Clinic and Hospital, Tulsa, Okla.; National Eating Disorders Association, Seattle; U.S. National Mental Health Information Center, Rockville, Md.; Archives of General Psychiatry; January-February 2009, Eating Disorders


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