1 / 11

Problematic eating (re weight loss)

Problematic eating (re weight loss). Dr Madeleine Tatham Consultant Clinical Psychologist Norfolk Community Eating Disorders Service/ Weight Intervention Norwich (WIN) m.tatham@nhs.net. Problematic eating behaviours. Snacking between meals and snacks Grazing Food choices

dbutters
Download Presentation

Problematic eating (re weight loss)

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Problematic eating (re weight loss) Dr Madeleine Tatham Consultant Clinical Psychologist Norfolk Community Eating Disorders Service/ Weight Intervention Norwich (WIN) m.tatham@nhs.net

  2. Problematic eating behaviours • Snacking between meals and snacks • Grazing • Food choices • Skipping meals and snacks • Night eating • Over eating • Emotional eating • Binge eating

  3. Binge eating (disorder) DSM 5 classification: • Recurrent episodes of binge eating. Characterised by: • Eating an objectively large amount of food in a discrete period of time • A sense of lack of control over eating during episode (i.e. cannot stop) • Binge eating episodes are associated with 3 or more of • Eating more rapidly than normal • Eating until feeling uncomfortably full • Eating large amounts of food when not physically hungry • Eating alone because feeling embarrassed by amount eating • Feeing disgusted with oneself, depressed or guilty after eating • Marked distress regarding binge eating • Binge eating occurs on average at least 1xweek for 3 months

  4. Over-eating vs. binge eating ( C Fairburn)

  5. Eating in response to emotions Positive / negative feelings If don’t learn to regulate emotions and / or have low tolerance (e.g. anger, boredom) Primary emotion (e.g. anger) Don’t manage feelings Trigger (e.g. argument) Blocking behaviour (Eat) Secondary emotion (e.g. depression) Weight gain

  6. Understanding eating patterns and behaviours • Monitoring • Current intake – structure, quantities, choices • Thoughts – plans, decisions • Emotions – e.g. anger, boredom, loneliness, sadness, anxiety • Context – environmental, interpersonal • Historical review • Family eating patterns • Regulation – food as reward, comfort etc. • Early problematic patterns - comfort eating / secret eating

  7. Distinguishing binge eating from other types of problematic eating • Use monitoring sheets • Amount of food • Emotional feelings • Questioning • Do you feel out of control when you’re eating? • Do you think about food all the time? • Do you eat in secret? • Do you eat until you feel sick? • Do you eat to escape from worries, relieve stress, or to comfort yourself? • Do you feel disgusted or ashamed after eating? • Do you feel powerless to stop eating, even though you want to? • NOT helpful to ask “do you binge?”

  8. Problematic eating - common issues • Automatic behaviour (i.e. learned habit) • Mindlessness • Planning • Self-regulation • Emotional regulation • Cognitive style – e.g. “all or nothing” & “permissive thinking”

  9. First steps – regulate eating • Planning • Monitoring • Decisional sheets (e.g. if I eat outside my plan…..) • Stimulus control measures • Mindful eating • Distraction techniques

  10. More advanced strategies • Emotional regulation (CBT/DBT) • Mindfulness • Problem solving skills • Stress management • Assertiveness

  11. When to refer onwards? • If binge eating / eating disorder – refer to • Norfolk Community Eating Disorders Service • For mild eating problems – refer to • Eating Matters • For peer support – refer to • Beat (Binge eating support groups) • For stress, anxiety, depression etc. – refer to • NSFT mental heath services (i.e. Wellbeing service, A&A team)

More Related