2015
DOI: 10.1016/j.brat.2015.04.004
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Weighing patients within cognitive-behavioural therapy for eating disorders: How, when and why

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Cited by 56 publications
(65 citation statements)
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“…For example, despite the manual clearly stating that the patient should be weighed by the therapist prior to every session, and that weight loss or weight gain sets the tone for the session, over one third of therapists in the Couturier et al56 study said that they did not weigh their FBT patients. Although the reasons for this were not detailed in the study, Waller and Mountford60 outlined several reasons given by therapists for not weighing their patients in the context of CBT. These included concerns that it will ruin the therapeutic relationship, a belief that weighing is unnecessary because the patient weighs him/herself or is already weighed by another professional, concern that the patient will be too upset if weighed, stating that there is not enough time in the session to weigh the patient, or believing that the therapist can judge weight gain or weight loss by looking at the patient.…”
Section: Implementation Of Family-based Treatmentmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…For example, despite the manual clearly stating that the patient should be weighed by the therapist prior to every session, and that weight loss or weight gain sets the tone for the session, over one third of therapists in the Couturier et al56 study said that they did not weigh their FBT patients. Although the reasons for this were not detailed in the study, Waller and Mountford60 outlined several reasons given by therapists for not weighing their patients in the context of CBT. These included concerns that it will ruin the therapeutic relationship, a belief that weighing is unnecessary because the patient weighs him/herself or is already weighed by another professional, concern that the patient will be too upset if weighed, stating that there is not enough time in the session to weigh the patient, or believing that the therapist can judge weight gain or weight loss by looking at the patient.…”
Section: Implementation Of Family-based Treatmentmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This includes eating disorders, where anxiety is a key maintaining factor for behaviours such as restriction, bingeing, purging and body avoidance (e.g., Pallister & Waller, 2008). Furthermore, anxiety can lead the eating-disordered patient to want to avoid central elements of therapy, such as weighing (e.g., Waller & Mountford, 2015). These processes in eating pathology explain why evidence-based cognitive-behavioural therapy (CBT) for eating disorders has a strong exposure-based element (e.g., Fairburn, 2008;Waller, Cordery, Corstorphine, Hinrichsen, Lawson, Mountford & Russell, 2007).…”
Section: Impact Of Education On Clinicians' Attitudes To Exposure Thementioning
confidence: 99%
“…Recent research hypothesizes that individuals with AN believe that food consumption will cause catastrophic weight gain, and any degree of weight gain stimulates a fear of uncontrollable and exponential weight gain. 24-25 Persons with AN also fear that weight restoration will lead to intolerable emotions, or violate their sense of self. 24 Acute treatment for AN is often perceived as direct opposition to individuals' desire for control over body weight, which may result in power struggles between patients and nurses.…”
Section: The Roy Adaptation Modelmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…41,44 Ongoing and regular knowledge about nutrition and fluid, electrolyte, and acid-base balance, will guide nursing interventions to reestablish an adaptive state of homeostasis and avoid refeeding syndrome, while simultaneously challenging patients' beliefs about food consumption and catastrophic weight gain and how weight gain will lead to intolerable emotions, or violate sense of self. 24-25 …”
Section: The Roy Adaptation Modelmentioning
confidence: 99%