Journal of Eating Disorders (Sep 2021)

Early weight gain trajectories in first episode anorexia: predictors of outcome for emerging adults in outpatient treatment

  • A. Austin,
  • M. Flynn,
  • K. L. Richards,
  • H. Sharpe,
  • K. L. Allen,
  • V. A. Mountford,
  • D. Glennon,
  • N. Grant,
  • A. Brown,
  • K. Mahoney,
  • L. Serpell,
  • G. Brady,
  • N. Nunes,
  • F. Connan,
  • M. Franklin-Smith,
  • M. Schelhase,
  • W. R. Jones,
  • G. Breen,
  • U. Schmidt

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s40337-021-00448-y
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9, no. 1
pp. 1 – 8

Abstract

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Plain English summary A key feature of anorexia nervosa (AN) is an unhealthily low body weight. Previous studies show that more weight gained early in inpatient treatment leads to better outcomes. This study tried to see if this was also true for outpatients receiving treatment for the first time. All participants were emerging adults between the ages of 16 and 25 who had been ill for less than 3 years. Weight was recorded across the first 12 weekly treatment sessions. Statistics showed that the patients fit roughly into four different groups in early treatment, each with different starting weights and rates of weight gain in the first 12 treatment sessions. The group a patient belonged to could sometimes be predicted by vomiting behaviours, level of depression, and patients’ perception of parental tolerance and expectations at the start of treatment. Out of the four groups, three did relatively well 1 year later, but one small group of patients did not. This small group had a higher starting weight than many of the other groups but did not gain any weight across the first 12 sessions. These patients could benefit from a change or increase in the amount or intensity of treatment after the first 12 treatment sessions

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