Treatment of Eating Disorders in Adults Versus Adolescents: Similarities and Differences.
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Abstract | :
Although several individual psychotherapies for adults with eating disorders are empirically supported, with family-based treatment (FBT) being the leading recommended empiric treatment in adolescents, patients with eating disorders are still difficult to treat, and outcomes are often poor. In some countries, the clinical services for adolescents and adults are separate, and it is common for patients to receive treatments that differ in terms of both theory and content when they are switched from adolescent to adult services. Changes in the nature of treatment also often occur when patients move from less intensive types of care to more intensive treatment, and vice versa. These transitions may create a discontinuity in the care pathway and disorient patients and their significant others about the strategies and procedures used for addressing eating problems. However, the observation that younger and older patients essentially share the same eating-disorder psychopathology has led to evidence-based enhanced cognitive-behavioral therapy (CBT-E) being adapted for use in adolescents. Originally an evidence-based treatment for adults with eating disorders, CBT-E has yielded promising results in trials in cohorts of adolescent outpatients and inpatients, and is recommended as an alternative to FBT in adolescent patients. |
Year of Publication | :
2021
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Journal | :
Clinical therapeutics
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Volume | :
43
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Issue | :
1
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Number of Pages | :
70-84
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ISSN Number | :
0149-2918
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URL | :
https://linkinghub.elsevier.com/retrieve/pii/S0149-2918(20)30511-7
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DOI | :
10.1016/j.clinthera.2020.10.015
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Short Title | :
Clin Ther
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