Abstract

The symptoms of starvation and dietary restriction are often the subject of targeted intervention in evidence-based treatments across eating disorder diagnoses and treatment models. Despite the level of attention given to these symptoms of clinical malnutrition, they are often treated by health professionals with no nutritional qualifications and in a non-clinical manner in the outpatient setting, with dietitians having no defined role in manualised treatment models. Recently the Australia & New Zealand Academy for Eating Disorders (ANZAED) published practice and training standards for dietitians to help characterise their role in eating disorder treatment. Since malnutrition, secondary to dietary restriction, is a clinically significant nutritional diagnosis that co-occurs in eating disorder presentations, this commentary proposes that dietitians are ideally-positioned to assess and advise on the clinical aspects of malnutrition as a key member of the multidisciplinary team. Food is a central focus in eating disorder treatment, suggesting that nutritional care needs to be addressed by a dietitian alongside the psychological aspects of care that are addressed by a mental health professional.

Highlights

  • While it is widely accepted that improved nutrition and eating behaviour are an integral aspect of eating disorder treatment, the role of the dietitian in treatment remains unclear

  • A recent review of the nutritional content of treatment manuals for adults with an eating disorder found that while 91% of manuals contained some degree of nutritionally-focused content, only 36% of the manuals recommended a dietitian be consulted as part of the multidisciplinary treatment approach [7], suggesting that dietetic involvement is not being recommended for many patients undergoing evidence-based psychological treatment

  • In our clinical experience and supported by recent research, malnutrition in outpatient eating disorder presentations is often not clinically assessed or treated in current evidence-based treatment manuals [7], and this is of concern

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Main text While it is widely accepted that improved nutrition and eating behaviour are an integral aspect of eating disorder treatment, the role of the dietitian in treatment remains unclear. A recent review of the nutritional content of treatment manuals for adults with an eating disorder found that while 91% of manuals contained some degree of nutritionally-focused content, only 36% of the manuals recommended a dietitian be consulted as part of the multidisciplinary treatment approach [7], suggesting that dietetic involvement is not being recommended for many patients undergoing evidence-based psychological treatment.

Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call