Specific Mental Health Disorders: Eating Disorders

Author(s):  
Sherrie S. Delinsky ◽  
Jennifer L. Derenne ◽  
Anne E. Becker
Author(s):  
Carolyn Black Becker ◽  
Nicholas R. Farrell ◽  
Glenn Waller

Eating disorders are serious mental health disorders that are associated with significant morbidity and mortality. This chapter provides eating disorders clinicians with the necessary understanding of both the differences associated with specific ED diagnoses and the transdiagnostic features that commonly present across diagnoses. Many, if not all, of the common features can be targeted using exposure therapy, which is discussed in subsequent chapters. The authors specifically address the most common features of anorexia nervosa, bulimia nervosa, and binge-eating disorder, as well as avoidant/restrictive food intake disorder and other specified/unspecified eating disorders. Key transdiagnostic features of eating disorders, including eating-related fear and avoidance, body image disturbance, and binge eating, are addressed through a brief case study.


Author(s):  
C Taylor ◽  
Andrea K Graham ◽  
Rachael E Flatt ◽  
Karin Waldherr ◽  
Ellen E Fitzsimmons-Craft

Abstract Background ICare represents a consortium of European Investigators examining the effects of online mental health care for a variety of common mental health disorders provided in a variety of settings. This article provides an overview of the evidence of effectiveness for Internet-based treatment for four common mental health disorders that are the focus of much of this work: depression, anxiety, substance abuse and eating disorders. Methods The overview focused primarily on systematic reviews and meta-analyses identified through PubMed (Ovid) and other databases and published in English. Given the large number of reviews specific to depression, anxiety, substance abuse and/or eating disorders, we did not focus on reviews that examined the effects of Internet-based interventions on mental health disorders in general. Each article was reviewed and summarized by one of the senior authors, and this review was then reviewed by the other senior authors. We did not address issues of prevention, cost-effectiveness, implementation or dissemination, as these are addressed in other reviews in this supplement. Results Across Internet-based intervention studies addressing depression, anxiety, substance abuse and eating disorders primarily among adults, almost all reviews and meta-analyses found that these interventions successfully reduce symptoms and are efficacious treatments. Generally, effect sizes for Internet-based interventions treating eating disorders and substance abuse are lower compared with interventions for depression and anxiety. Conclusions Given the effectiveness of Internet-based interventions to reduce symptoms of these common mental health disorders, efforts are needed to examine issues of how they can be best disseminated and implemented in a variety of health care and other settings.


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