Psychology Research and Behavior Management (Apr 2021)

Integrating Family-Based Treatment Principles in the Acute Inpatient Treatment of Adolescents with Restrictive Eating Disorders

  • Freizinger M,
  • Jhe G,
  • Pluhar E,
  • Mancini L

Journal volume & issue
Vol. Volume 14
pp. 449 – 454

Abstract

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Melissa Freizinger,1,2 Grace Jhe,1,2 Emily Pluhar,1,2 Lisa Mancini1 1Division of Adolescent and Young Adult Medicine, Boston Children’s Hospital, Boston, MA, 02115, USA; 2Department of Psychiatry, Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA, 02115, USACorrespondence: Melissa FreizingerDivision of Adolescent and Young Adult Medicine, Boston Children’s Hospital, 333 Longwood Avenue, Boston, MA, 02115, USATel +1617 355 5974Fax +1617 730 0004Email [email protected]: Eating disorders (ED) are serious psychiatric illnesses with one of the highest mortality rate of any psychiatric disorder. The health sequelae of eating disorders are one of the most common causes of medical hospitalizations at freestanding pediatric hospitals in the United States. The economic impact of EDs on health systems and families is substantial. The Society for Adolescent Medicine (SAHM) recommends family-based treatment (FBT) as the first-line approach for adolescents with restrictive eating disorders due to a large body of evidence demonstrating the treatment’s efficacy and cost effectiveness. Although FBT was originally developed as an outpatient treatment, the tenets and principles of the treatment have also been used in higher levels of care. This brief report discusses how components of FBT were adapted for a medical inpatient unit at a pediatric hospital in order to integrate empirically based treatment.Keywords: eating disorders, family-based therapy, medical inpatient treatment, anorexia nervosa

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