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Department of Health and Social Services Library

Read@DHSS: Eating Disorders

by Michelle Wynne-Feigin on 2023-03-02T09:00:00-05:00 | 0 Comments

The DHSS Library has over 10,000 journal titles, eBooks, print books, and DVDs available to you as a DHSS employee. 
Each week we will highlight three book titles of particular interest to help you learn more about our collection.

To help accessing any of our eBooks, please email the DHSS Library.

Cover ArtPocket Guide for the Assessment and Treatment of Eating Disorders by James D. Lock (Editor)
ISBN: 9781615371563
Publication Date: 2018-10-10
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.
 
Cover ArtTipping the Scales by Patricia Westmoreland (Editor)
ISBN: 9781615373499
Publication Date: 2020-10-27
Tipping the Scales: Ethical and Legal Dilemmas in Managing Severe Eating Disorders centers on the complex and at times wrenching medicolegal and ethical challenges encountered in treating patients with severe and enduring eating disorders (SEEDs). Unlike other mental health disorders, for which the care of a medical physician is typically unnecessary, patients with eating disorders have many significant medical complications that demand careful oversight by a physician knowledgeable in treating these disorders. The tragic dearth of such expertise is made more alarming by the fact that anorexia nervosa has the highest mortality rate of any mental disorder aside from opioid abuse. Accordingly, the book addresses the medical consequences of SEEDs and explores that subgroup of patients whose illness appears intractable--people who are no longer seeking a "cure" but, rather, enough improvement to afford them a reasonable quality of life. For such patients, depending on their age, treatment history, and support system, treatment teams may either commit to achieving a full recovery or engage in a harm reduction model. In empathic, accessible prose, the book * Examines ethical conflicts that arise in SEEDs, in particular the critical dilemma between saving a life and reducing suffering. Although both are core values of medicine--and eating disorders have an exceedingly high mortality rate--relief of suffering through refeeding and other treatments can bring about both physical and emotional discomfort. * Reviews the issues of patient autonomy and mental capacity in the question of who ultimately gets to establish treatment goals. The assignment and role of medical guardianship for patients deemed incapacitated is described in detail. * Explores the perception of "futility," which may reflect burnout of the treatment team for these very challenging patients rather than no hope of success. In particular, perceived futility may contribute to the increased emergence of physician-assisted death and euthanasia in this population both internationally and in the United States. * Devotes several chapters to the differences between palliative care, harm reduction, and futility. Patients sometimes leave treatment and request palliative care, and the book addresses the role of psychiatry in such cases as well as advance care planning and other essential topics.* Describes the medical complexities and comorbidities inherent in caring for patients with SEEDs, including bone density loss, gastrointestinal complaints, and cardiac irregularities, which can result in death.* Presents numerous case studies for comparison, elucidating the thorny ethical and legal issues attendant upon caring for these patients. Tipping the Scales assists physicians, mental health professionals, and patients in making decisions that are in the patient's best interests, whether they lead to healing and recovery or a dignified passage within the bounds of our current knowledge and the ethics of palliative end-of life care.
 
Cover ArtAM:STARs: Advances in Adolescent Eating Disorders by American Academy of; Neville H. Golden (Editor); Martin M. Fisher (Editor)
ISBN: 9781610021876
Publication Date: 2018-11-30
AM:STARs is the official publication of the AAP Section on Adolescent Health. Published 2 times per year, it offers adolescent specialists and primary care physicians timely information on matters that relate to adolescent health and wellness. AM:STARs: Advances in Adolescent Eating Disorders covers a wide variety of topics, including: Challenging classical concepts in the diagnosis and medical management of eating disorders The media and eating disorders An integrated approach to eating disorders and obesity prevention: what the research has taught us Sex differences among adolescents and young adults with eating disorders Avoidant restrictive food intake disorder Atypical anorexia nervosa The female athlete triad Bone health and eating disorders Recent advances in neuroimaging studies of adolescents and young adults with eating disorders Newer approaches to nutritional rehabilitation Role of the adolescent medicine provider and nutritionist in family-based therapy Whether partial hospitalization and residential programs for the treatment of eating disorders work Psychopharmacology and eating disorders.

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