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MORE ABOUT THIS BOOK
Main description:
This concise text contains clinical cases covering different types of dysfunctional eating with a focus on the eating disorders in the DSM-5, including the new disorder Avoidant-Restrictive Food Intake Disorder (ARFID). Each case will follow the format of clinical presentation, diagnosis, discussion, and suggested readings. The discussion sections will prioritize treatment and management, with practical tips for clinicians. The text will also include boxed "quick snapshots" with important fundamentals that are relevant to the case and the diagnosis or diagnoses being presented. Presentations that are common in clinical practice, but that may not fit neatly into one specific diagnostic category, will also be reviewed, with guidance on principles of assessment, prioritization of problems, formulation, and management. The book encourages the consideration of comorbidities and differential diagnosis. The structure of the book's content will give readers a head-start in honing their differential diagnosis skills in the area of eating disorders. The book is split into three categories, based on the most immediately visible features of the case: I. The person who eats too little, II. The person who eats too much, III. The person who eats in an odd or idiosyncratic way. For teaching purposes, several of the cases describe a "not normal" eating presentation that are not classified within one of the current definitions of a psychiatric disorder. Fundamentals of Diagnosing and Treating Eating Disorders is aimed at psychiatrists, primary care physicians, and other clinicians who may see patients with eating disorders.
Contents:
Introduction
A. Category 1: Patients who eat too little
Arlene, an anxious young woman
Becky's body worries
Cassandra, the college student
Danny, the picky eater
Eric, the hopeful Olypian
Francine's insulin issues
B. Category 2: Patients who eat too much
Ginny, the secret eater
Hannah's troubles
Ian, the guilty eater
James, the inconsistent eater
Kendra's social anxiety
Lisa, overweight but undernourished
C. Category 3: Patients who eat in odd ways
Mimi, the quiet little girl
Nilda's food allergies
Olive, the healthy eater
Peter, healthy weight but unhealthy
PRODUCT DETAILS
Publisher: Springer (Springer International Publishing AG)
Publication date: November, 2016
Pages: None
Weight: 1912g
Availability: Available
Subcategories: General Practice, Nutrition, Psychiatry