Assessment of an Eating Disorder
continued
HealthyPlace.com Audio
Eating
Disorders
Eating
disorder treatment specialist discusses the causes of eating
disorders, what parents and loved ones should be aware of,
and crossing over from anorexia to bulimia.
Listen with
Real Player. |
|
|
These are all things that the clinician needs to assess during the
early
stages of treatment. It may take a few sessions or even longer to get
information in each of these areas. In some sense,
assessment actually
continues to take place throughout therapy. It may actually take months of
therapy for a client to divulge certain information and for the clinician to
get a clear picture of all the issues outlined above and to sort them out as
they relate to the eating disorder. Assessment and treatment are ongoing
processes tied together.
STANDARDIZED TESTS
A variety of questionnaires for mental measurement have been devised to
help professionals assess behaviors and underlying issues commonly involved
in eating disorders. A brief review of a few of these assessments follows.
EAT (EATING ATTITUDES TEST)
One assessment tool is the Eating Attitudes Test (EAT). EAT is a rating
scale that is designed to distinguish patients with anorexia nervosa from
weight-preoccupied, but otherwise healthy, female college students, which
these days is a formidable task. The twenty-six item questionnaire is
broken down into three subscales: dieting, bulimia and food preoccupation,
and oral control.
The EAT can be useful in measuring pathology in underweight girls but
caution is required when interpreting the EAT results of average weight or
overweight girls. The EAT also shows a high false-positive rate in
distinguishing eating disorders from disturbed eating behaviors in college
women. The EAT has a child version, which researchers have already used to
gather data. It has shown that almost 7 percent of eight- to
thirteen-year-old children score in the anorexic category, a percentage that
closely matches that found among adolescents and young adults.
There are advantages to the self-report format of the EAT, but there are
also limitations. Subjects, particularly those with anorexia nervosa, are
not always honest or accurate when self-reporting. However, the EAT has been
shown to be useful in detecting cases of anorexia nervosa, and the assessor
can use whatever information is gained from this assessment combined with
other assessment procedures to make a diagnosis.
EDI (EATING DISORDER INVENTORY)
The most popular and influential of the available assessment tools is the
Eating Disorder Inventory, or EDI, developed by David Garner and colleagues.
The EDI is a self-report measure of symptoms. Although the intent of the EDI
was originally more limited, it is being used to assess the thinking
patterns and behavioral characteristics of anorexia nervosa and bulimia
nervosa. The EDI is easy to administer and provides standardized subscale
scores on several dimensions that are clinically relevant to eating
disorders. Originally there were eight subscales. Three of the subscales
assess attitudes and behaviors concerning eating, weight, and shape. These
are drive for thinness, bulimia, and body dissatisfaction. Five of the
scales measure more general psychological traits relevant to eating
disorders. These are ineffectiveness, perfectionism, interpersonal distrust,
awareness of internal stimuli, and maturity fears. The EDI 2 is a follow-up
to the original EDI and includes three new subscales: asceticism, impulse
control, and social insecurity.
The EDI can provide information to clinicians that is helpful in
understanding the unique experience of each patient and in guiding treatment
planning. The easy-to-interpret graphed profiles can be compared to norms
and to other eating disordered patients and can be used to track progress of
the patient during the course of treatment. The EAT and the EDI were
developed to assess the female population who most likely have or are
susceptible to developing an eating disorder. However, both of these
assessment tools have been used with males with eating problems or
compulsive exercise behaviors.
In nonclinical settings the EDI provides a means of identifying
individuals who have eating problems or those at risk for developing eating
disorders. The body dissatisfaction scale has been successfully used to
predict the emergence of eating disorders in high-risk populations.
There is a twenty-eight-item, multiple-choice, self-report measure for
bulimia nervosa known as BULIT-R that was based on the DSM III-R criteria
for bulimia nervosa and is a mental measurement tool to assess the severity
of this disorder.
BODY IMAGE ASSESSMENTS
HealthyPlace.com Audio
Boys
and Body Image
The
pressures on girls to be thin are well known, but do boys
feel the pressure too when it comes to shaping up?
Listen with
Real Player. |
|
|
Body image disturbance has been found to be a
dominant characteristic of
eating disordered individuals, a significant predictor of who might develop
an eating disorder and an indicator of those individuals having received or
still receiving treatment who might relapse. As Hilda Bruch, a pioneer in
eating disorder research and treatment, pointed out, "Body image disturbance
distinguishes the
eating disorders,
anorexia nervosa and
bulimia nervosa,
from other psychological conditions that involve weight loss and eating
abnormalities and its reversal is essential to recovery." This being true,
it is important to assess body image disturbance in those with disordered
eating. One way to measure body image disturbance is the Body
Dissatisfaction subscale of the EDI mentioned above. Another assessment
method is the PBIS, Perceived Body Image Scale, developed at British
Columbia's Children's Hospital.
The PBIS provides an evaluation of body image dissatisfaction and
distortion in eating disordered patients. The PBIS is a visual rating scale
consisting of eleven cards containing figure drawings of bodies ranging from
emaciated to obese. Subjects are given the cards and asked four different
questions that represent different aspects of body image. Subjects are asked
to pick which of the figure cards best represents their answers to the
following four questions:
-
Which body best represents the way you
think you look?
-
Which body best represents the way you
feel you are?
-
Which body best represents the way you see
yourself in the mirror?
-
Which body best represents the way you
would like to look?
The PBIS was developed for easy and rapid
administration to determine which components of body image are disturbed and
to what degree. The PBIS is useful not only as an assessment tool but also
as an interactive experience facilitating the therapy.
There are other assessment tools available. In assessing body image it is
important to keep in mind that body image is a multifaceted phenomenon with
three main components: perception, attitude, and behavior. Each of these
components needs to be considered.
Other assessments can be done to gather information in the various
domains, such as the "Beck Depression Inventory" to assess depression, or
assessments designed specifically for dissociation or obsessive-compulsive
behavior. A thorough psychosocial evaluation should be done to gather
information on family, job, work, relationships, and any trauma or abuse
history. Additionally, other professionals can perform assessments as part
of a treatment team approach. A dietitian can do a nutrition assessment and
a psychiatrist can perform a psychiatric evaluation. Integrating the results
of various assessments allows the clinician, patient, and treatment team to
develop an appropriate, individualized treatment plan. One of the most
important assessments of all that needs to be obtained and maintained is the
one performed by a medical doctor to evaluate the individual's medical
status.
MEDICAL ASSESSMENT
The information on the following pages is an overall summary of what is
needed in a medical assessment. For a more detailed and thorough discussion
of medical assessment and treatment, see chapter 15, "Medical Management of
Anorexia Nervosa and Bulimia Nervosa."
Eating disorders are often referred to as psychosomatic disorders, not
because the physical symptoms associated with them are "all in the person's
head," but because they are illnesses where a disturbed psyche directly
contributes to a disturbed soma (body). Aside from the social stigma and
psychological turmoil that an eating disorder causes in an individual's
life, the medical complications are numerous, ranging all the way from dry
skin to cardiac arrest. In fact, anorexia nervosa and bulimia nervosa are
two of the most life-threatening of all psychiatric illnesses. The following
is a summary of the various sources from which complications arise.
SOURCES OF MEDICAL SYMPTOMS IN PATIENTS WITH EATING DISORDERS
-
Self-starvation
-
Self-induced vomiting
-
Laxative abuse
-
Diuretic abuse
-
Ipecac abuse
-
Compulsive exercise
-
Bingeing
-
Exacerbation of preexisting diseases
(e.g., insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus)
-
Treatment effects of nutritional
rehabilitation and psychopharmacological agents (drugs prescribed to
alter mental functioning)
A THOROUGH MEDICAL ASSESSMENT INCLUDES
-
A physical exam
-
Laboratory and other diagnostic tests
-
A nutritional assessment/evaluation
-
A written or oral interview of weight,
dieting, and eating behavior
-
Continued monitoring by a physician. The
physician must treat any medical or biochemical cause for the eating
disorder, treat the medical symptoms that arise as a result of the
eating disorder, and must rule out any other possible explanations for
symptoms such as malabsorption states, primary thyroid disease, or
severe depression resulting in loss of appetite. Additionally, medical
complications may arise as consequences of the treatment itself; for
example, refeeding edema (swelling that results from the starved body's
reaction to eating again—see chapter 15) or complications from
mind-altering medications prescribed
-
Assessment and treatment of any needed
psychotropic medication (most often referred to a psychiatrist)
A normal lab report is not a guarantee of good
health, and physicians need to explain this to their patients. In some cases
at the discretion of the physician, more invasive tests like an MRI for
brain atrophy or bone marrow test may have to be performed to show
abnormality. If lab tests are even slightly abnormal, the physician should
discuss these with the eating disordered patient and show concern.
Physicians are unaccustomed to discussing abnormal lab values unless they
are extremely out of range, but with eating disorder patients this may be a
very useful treatment tool.
Once it is determined or likely that an individual has a problem that
needs attention, it is important to get help not only for the person with
the disorder but for those significant others who are also affected.
Significant others not only need assistance in understanding eating
disorders and in getting their loved ones help but in getting help for
themselves as well.
Those who have tried to help know all too well how easy it is to say the
wrong thing,
feel like they are getting nowhere, lose patience and hope, and
become increasingly frustrated, angry, and depressed themselves. For these
reasons and more, the following chapter offers guidelines for family members
and significant others of individuals with eating disorders.
pages: 1
2 3
top ~
next ~
send page to a
friend
|