“…Anorexia nervosa (AN) commonly develops in adolescence, impacting not only the young person's physical and psychological well‐being but also the family and psychosocial development during a transformational life cycle period (Ruuska, Koivisto, Rantanen, & Kaltiala‐Heino, ; Steiner et al, ; Striegel‐Moore, Seeley, & Lewinsohn, ; Wentz, Gillberg, Anckarsater, Gillberg, & Rastam, ; Whitney & Eisler, ). Research of adolescents with AN has generally found higher impairment in family relationships and functioning compared with non‐clinical populations (Emanuelli et al, ; Laghi et al, ; McDermott, Batik, Roberts, & Gibbon, ; Nilsson, Engstrom, & Hagglof, ). Specific areas of impairment commonly reported by parents or adolescents in AN studies include difficulty maintaining family rules and clear roles, emotional over‐involvement, communication difficulties, lower levels of cohesion and dissatisfaction with family life (Ciao, Accurso, Fitzsimmons‐Craft, Lock, & Le Grange, ; Cook‐Darzens, Doyen, Falissard, & Mouren, ; Emanuelli et al, ; Vidovic, Juresa, Begovac, Mahnik, & Tocilj, ).…”