
Our Eating Disorder Recovery Programs are available for those seeking healing from anorexia, bulimia, compulsive overeating, food addiction, emotional eating or recovery after gastric bypass surgery. There is a future and a hope for you to find a life worth living – our comprehensive recovery programs include the latest in advanced treatment and exceptional quality of care.
Due to cultural ideals of feminine beauty, young women feel a strong desire to be thinner than their bodies naturally tend to be. As a result, they change their eating patterns and they may develop eating disorders. The most common eating disorders are Anorexia Nervosa and Bulimia. Both eating disorders are more common among young adults than at any other
Some common physical, emotional, and spiritual signs are:
What is Anorexia Nervosa?
Anorexia Nervosa is a serious psychological and physiological disorder. Anorexia Nervosa has the following characteristics:
What is Bulimia?
Bulimia is binge-eating followed by self-induced vomiting or the use of laxatives. Bulimia has the following characteristics:
The Risks of Anorexia Nervosa & Bulimia
Anorexia Nervosa
Bulimia
Ways to Help
Treatment Strategies
Eating disorders can be treated and a healthy weight restored. The sooner these disorders are diagnosed and treated, the better the outcomes are likely to be. Because of their complexity, eating disorders require a comprehensive treatment plan involving medical care and monitoring, psychosocial interventions, nutritional counseling and, when appropriate, medication management. At the time of diagnosis, the clinician must determine whether the person is in immediate danger and requires hospitalization.
Treatment of anorexia calls for a specific program that involves three main phases: (1) restoring weight lost to severe dieting and purging; (2) treating psychological disturbances such as distortion of body image, low self-esteem, and interpersonal conflicts; and (3) achieving long-term remission and rehabilitation, or full recovery. Early diagnosis and treatment increases the treatment success rate. Use of psychotropic medication in people with anorexia should be considered only after weight gain has been established. Certain selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs) have been shown to be helpful for weight maintenance and for resolving mood and anxiety symptoms associated with anorexia.
The acute management of severe weight loss is usually provided in an inpatient hospital setting, where feeding plans address the person's medical and nutritional needs. In some cases, intravenous feeding is recommended. Once malnutrition has been corrected and weight gain has begun, psychotherapy (often cognitive-behavioral or interpersonal psychotherapy) can help people with anorexia overcome low self-esteem and address distorted thought and behavior patterns. Families are sometimes included in the therapeutic process.
The primary goal of treatment for bulimia is to reduce or eliminate binge eating and purging behavior. To this end, nutritional rehabilitation, psychosocial intervention, and medication management strategies are often employed. Establishment of a pattern of regular, non-binge meals, improvement of attitudes related to the eating disorder, encouragement of healthy but not excessive exercise, and resolution of co-occurring conditions such as mood or anxiety disorders are among the specific aims of these strategies.
Individual psychotherapy (especially cognitive-behavioral or interpersonal psychotherapy), group psychotherapy that uses a cognitive-behavioral approach, and family or marital therapy have been reported to be effective. Psychotropic medications, primarily antidepressants such as the selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs), have been found helpful for people with bulimia, particularly those with significant symptoms of depression or anxiety, or those who have not responded adequately to psychosocial treatment alone. These medications also may help prevent relapse. The treatment goals and strategies for binge-eating disorder are similar to those for bulimia, and studies are currently evaluating the effectiveness of various interventions.
People with eating disorders often do not recognize or admit that they are ill. As a result, they may strongly resist getting and staying in treatment. Family members or other trusted individuals can be helpful in ensuring that the person with an eating disorder receives needed care and rehabilitation. For some people, treatment may be long term.
The following modalities are available at each of our offices:
Individual therapy is designed to provide analysis, direction, and support in a therapeutic relationship whose hallmark feature will be mutual respect and responsibility. We believe that a therapy session should be guided by the needs of the client and treatment plans are designed around the needs the client presents. The frequency of sessions and the duration of the therapy relationship are determined by the client. Our staff has an experiential orientation which ensures that sessions will focus on real life problems and solutions with numerous opportunities for clients to practice change outside of the therapy session.
Effective family therapy must begin with the bonding of values between therapist and family members. Therapy should never dictate the values to which the family members must subscribe. When the values between therapist and family are incompatible, therapy can not be successful.
The development and maintenance of a rewarding romantic relationship will involve an intense commitment to the 12 Steps and a willingness to address the challenges that each member has brought to the union. Front Range Counseling Center staff will work to assist the members in resolving immediate conflicts while working to uncover the antecedents to the current difficulty.
An assessment to determine if an individual is suffering with a eating disorder should involve a comprehensive investigation into the individual's developmental relationship with their problematic relationship with food. When providing designing services for Counseling Eating Disorders, a comprehensive diagnostic assessment should include the following components:
Counseling Eating Disorders in a residential setting often requires aftercare support services. Our staff can provide therapeutic services to people suffering with eating disorders who are completing residential treatment and require transition support to stabilize their early recovery efforts. The focus of aftercare support is primarily on bridging the gap to 12 Step Groups and developing a relapse prevention plan.
These services focus therapeutic support on the following issues:
We encourage you to set an appointment today to begin your journey of healing from eating disorders. To make an appointment with us, click here.
National Institute of Mental Health (NIMH)
Office of Communications and Public Liaison
Public Inquiries: (301) 443-4513
Media Inquiries: (301) 443-4536
American Anorexia Bulimia Association
Phone: (212) 575-6200
Eating Disorders Awareness and Prevention
Phone: 1 (800) 931-2237
Harvard Eating Disorders Center
Phone: 1 (888) 236-1188 ext. 100
National Association of Anorexia Nervosa
and Associated Disorders
Phone: (847) 831-3438
There are two ways to setup an appointment with one of our counselors:
1) Fill out the Contact Form and a counselor will call you with 24-hours; 2) Call our offices at 303-933-5800.