“…One study found that eating disorder symptoms at discharge were predicted by eating disorder symptoms on admission, level of patients' confidence to change, patients' social quality of life and level of carers' expressed emotion among 107 participants with AN [2], However the study utilized a mixed sample initially comprised of 161 adolescent and adult Inpatients and 16 adult DTP patients from a range of treatment centres and did not specify how many (if any) DTP patients were included in the regression analysis which identified these predictors of outcome [2], Other studies found ( and body dissatisfaction, a higher intensity DTP produced better outcomes (Olmsted et al, 2013) though four-day DTPs can result in large effect sizes for symptom reduction (Crino and Djokvucic, 2010;Kong, 2005;Olmsted et al, 2013) and decrease in depression (Kong, 2005). In relation to achieving weight restoration, the assertion that there may be a "critical threshold" (Olmsted et al, 2013, p. 8) of therapeutic support necessary appears to be supported by the results from DTPs of varying intensities, indicating that underweight patients are generally able to increase their weight significantly during admission to day treatment, and with large effect sizes.…”