“…Family therapy has been recommended as the primary clinical strategy in both an orexia nervosa [Minuchin et al, 1978] and bulimia nervosa [Schwartz et al, 1985], or as an adjunct to other methods [Andersen, 1985;Bruch, 1973;Crisp, 1970;, Family treatment focuses heavily on challenging the enmeshed and overprotective interactional styles. Sessions are aimed at identifying and examining assump tions implied by excessive intrusion, encour aging the direct expression of previously avoided emotions such as anger, depression and anxiety, supporting parental limit-set ting and attempting to defuse the pressures that have mounted as a result of months or years of frustration in contending with the eating disorder.…”