Pocket Guide for the Assessment and Treatment of Eating Disorders
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Description
An exceptionally practical book for clinicians who are interested in evaluating and treating eating disorders in children and adults, Pocket Guide for the Assessment and Treatment of Eating Disorders, provides expert guidance in a succinct and accessible format. Most people with eating disorders lack access to specialty services, leaving the majority undiagnosed and untreated. The editors and contributors, Stanford University researchers and clinicians, have written the book for nonspecialists in hopes that it will foster the development of relevant clinical skills and allow them to help patients with eating disorders in their practices. This book is squarely aimed at the big picture while highlighting the most important additional details. The first chapter provides an overview of all the major eating disorders and also includes a discussion of issues related to screening, race, culture, and gender that are cross-cutting and applicable to all the diagnostically themed chapters. Each of the remaining chapters focuses on a specific diagnostic group and is organized systematically to allow the reader to easily identify comparable elements across diagnostic groupings quickly.
Helpful features of the book include:
- Consistent chapter structure for ease of access. Each chapter begins with a brief introduction, followed by a key diagnostic checklist, diagnostic rule outs, risks and epidemiology, psychiatric and medical comorbidity, clinical presentations, evidence-based interventions, treatments illustrated, a clinical decision-making flow chart, common outcomes, resources and further readings, and references.
- Stand-alone chapters, allowing the user to access all the pertinent information without prerequisite preparation.
- Short narrative vignettes describing each of the major evidence-based interventions for each diagnostic grouping. These model effective practitioner-patient interactions and help readers improve their clinical skills. In addition, there are vignettes across the age spectrum, affording the reader valuable exposure to a full range of cases.
- Emphasis on evidence-based treatments. Evidential support is graded based on slightly modified criteria developed by the American Psychological Association, with Levels 1 to 4—from established treatments to those of questionable efficacy.
- Generous use of tables and figures, comprising all the major content in a concise, easily understandable fashion.
Authoritative, accessible, and designed to fit in a lab coat pocket, Pocket Guide for the Assessment and Treatment of Eating Disorders is a practical book which will help busy clinicians quickly find the most relevant and updated information, without overwhelming them with detail.
Contents
- Contributors
- Foreword
- Preface
- How to Use This Book
- Chapter 1. Eating Disorders: The Basics
- Chapter 2. Anorexia Nervosa
- Chapter 3. Bulimia Nervosa
- Chapter 4. Binge-Eating Disorder
- Chapter 5. Avoidant/Restrictive Food Intake Disorder
- Chapter 6. Atypical Eating Disorders
- Chapter 7. Eating Disorders in the Context of Obesity
- Index
Contributors
- Sarah Adler, Psy.D.
W. Stewart Agras, M.D.
Cara Bohon, Ph.D.
Jennifer Derenne, M.D.
Kathleen Kara Fitzpatrick, Ph.D.
Nina Kirz, M.D.
Lilya Osipov, Ph.D.
Athena Robinson, Ph.D.
Cristin D. Runfola, Ph.D.
Debra L. Safer, M.D.
Hannah Welch
About the Authors
James D. Lock, M.D., Ph.D., is Professor of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences and Pediatrics at the Stanford University School of Medicine in Stanford, California.
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