4.2 Article

The Evolution of Enhanced Cognitive Behavior Therapy for Eating Disorders: Learning From Treatment Nonresponse

Journal

COGNITIVE AND BEHAVIORAL PRACTICE
Volume 18, Issue 3, Pages 394-402

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC
DOI: 10.1016/j.cbpra.2010.07.007

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In recent years there has been widespread acceptance that cognitive behavior therapy (CBT) is the treatment of choice for bulimia nervosa. The cognitive behavioral treatment of bulimia nervosa (CBT-BN) was first described in 1981. Over the past decades the Meaty and treatment have evolved in response to a variety of challenges. The treatment has been adapted to make it suitable for all forms of eating disorder-thereby making it transdiagnostic in its scope- and treatment procedures have been refined to improve outcome. The new version of the treatment, termed enhanced CBT (CBT-E) also addresses psychopathological processes external to the eating disorder, which, in certain subgroups of patients, interact with the disorder itself In this paper we discuss how the development of this broader theory and treatment arose from focusing on those patients who did not respond well to earlier versions of the treatment.

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