2010
DOI: 10.1016/j.psc.2010.04.004
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Cognitive Behavioral Therapy for Eating Disorders

Abstract: Cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT) is the leading evidence-based treatment for bulimia nervosa. A new “enhanced” version of the treatment appears to be more potent and has the added advantage of being suitable for all eating disorders, including anorexia nervosa and eating disorder not otherwise specified. This article reviews the evidence supporting CBT in the treatment of eating disorders and provides an account of the “transdiagnostic” theory that underpins the enhanced form of the treatment. It ends with a… Show more

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Cited by 299 publications
(200 citation statements)
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“…Esta versión mejorada utiliza una variedad de nuevas estrategias y procedimientos con el propósito de potenciar los resultados, e incluye módulos dirigidos a tratar ciertos obstáculos del cambio tales como el perfeccionismo, la baja autoestima y las dificultades interpersonales (Murphy, Straebler, Cooper y Fairburn, 2010). Cuenta con dos modalidades de tratamiento: la primera se dirige exclusivamente a tratar la psicopatología del ta; la segunda (la forma más amplia de tratamiento), no solo pone el foco de atención en la superación de los obstáculos externos de cambio, sino que también se centra en la psicopatología más compleja.…”
Section: Terapia Cognitiva Mejoradaunclassified
“…Esta versión mejorada utiliza una variedad de nuevas estrategias y procedimientos con el propósito de potenciar los resultados, e incluye módulos dirigidos a tratar ciertos obstáculos del cambio tales como el perfeccionismo, la baja autoestima y las dificultades interpersonales (Murphy, Straebler, Cooper y Fairburn, 2010). Cuenta con dos modalidades de tratamiento: la primera se dirige exclusivamente a tratar la psicopatología del ta; la segunda (la forma más amplia de tratamiento), no solo pone el foco de atención en la superación de los obstáculos externos de cambio, sino que también se centra en la psicopatología más compleja.…”
Section: Terapia Cognitiva Mejoradaunclassified
“…In relation to individual psychotherapy, behaviour analysis was recommended as one the effective preliminary approach to identify problematic behaviours during mealtimes and then to "teach" an appropriate set of behaviours that will yield a proper mealtime experience (Zimmerman, 2010). Others suggested Cognitive-behavioural Therapy (CBT) for the treatment of eating disorders (Hay, Bacaltchuk, Stefano & Kashyap, 2009) as they believed that the approach has been effectively utilized in many treatment procedures (Murphy, Straebler, Cooper & Fairburn, 2010).…”
Section: Review Of Literaturementioning
confidence: 99%
“…This course of treatment, developed by Fairburn and colleagues [3] , has a 40%-50% success rate in making long-term changes to patients eating behaviour [24] . Antidepressant medication [25] ; interpersonal psychotherapy (IPT) [24,26] or an intensive CBT programme is secondary interventions when CBT alone fails [4,22] . Dialectical behaviour therapy (DBT) has been shown to be effective in the treatment of binge eating disorder (BED ) when other combinations of treatment fail.…”
Section: Treating Diabulimiamentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Although these disorders are different in symptomology, they have similar clinical features including psychopathological traits and the obsession with body shape and weight are prominent in addition to cognitive distortions, such as alterations in body image. Individuals diagnosed with an eating disorder can also present with depression or anxiety disorder, and are usually socially withdrawn [3,4] . Diabulimia, is analogous to an eating disorder in which adolescents and young people, mostly women, with type 1 diabetes mellitus (DM), deliberately omit insulin to lose weight or to prevent weight gain.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%