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"Doing What
Works" in the
professional
management and
treatment of
Eating Disorders
The Nuts and
Bolts of Eating
Disorder
Treatment - A
Lecture Series
Abigail
Natenshon would
be available to
speak about
some, or all, of
the specific
topics described
below, in any
combination, on
site or on-line.
Accommodate the
unique needs of
your staff or
audience, as
well as the time
available for
the presentation
you seek, by
combining the
speaking topics
that most
directly address
the concerns of
your
participants.
Abigail is
available to
present 90
minute
workshops,
half-day
workshops, or
day-long (or
longer)
teaching/experiential
events. She is
also available
for small group
education and
case
consultation.
Treatment
techniques that
work with
generalist
treatment cases
simply don't cut
it when it comes
to the treatment
of eating
disorders.
Clinicians are
hungry to
understand
exactly what
sets this
treatment and
its protocols
apart. For
eating disorder
cases that may
take months,
years or even
decades to heal,
training
workshops
highlight the
essentials of
care provision,
offering a bare
bones structure
for shepherding
the healing
process,
step-by-step,
from diagnosis
to recovery.
These
opportunities
also provide a
superb milieu
for small group
training and
case
consultation.
In addressing
what we
practitioners do
with these
clients and how
we do it,
Natenshon
translates
research and
theories into
much needed and
practicable
applications
through her
insights and
expertise, ripe
and
well-seasoned
over four
decades of
immersion in
clinical
practice. A
focus of her
teaching is on
the
practitioner's
unique
requirement for
self-awareness
leading to a
creative and
flexible use of
self in
practice.
Of interest to
psychotherapists,
nutritionists,
medical doctors,
educators and
athletic
coaches, as well
as parents and
families,
training
workshops speak
with relevance
to all those who
interface with
eating
disordered
individuals and
their families,
professionally
and in the
course of daily
living. Most
professionals
who treat eating
disorders have
not been
formally trained
to address the
unique and
diverse body of
knowledge and
professional
challenges
involved in
treating and
healing these
disorders. That
is, however, not
meant to imply
that therapists
are unprepared
to meet these
tasks; in fact,
most generalist
practitioners
have already
mastered the
skills they
require. What
clinicians are
lacking is the
guidance to know
which of these
to use, when,
how, and with
whom, to
effectively heal
these disorders.
Speaker's
Objectives
Participants
will learn to
1. Recognize the
unique qualities
that set eating
disorders
practice and
treatment apart.
The basic
structure and
fabric of eating
disorder
treatment is
action-based and
change-centered.
The work is
intentional and
collaborative,
limit-setting
yet loving.
2. Discover the
unique personal
and professional
challenges
required of
professionals
treating eating
disorders.
Within the
therapeutic
relationship,
the practitioner
models mindful
self awareness
and life skill
mastery as a
prerequisite for
the patient to
achieve the
same. Eating
disorders heal
largely through
human
connections.
3. Utilize
treatment tools,
strategies and
nuts-and-bolts
practice
techniques; the
basic structure
and fabric of
treatment is
action-based and
change-centered.
4. Discover the
learning
capacity and
role of the
"plastic" brain
as it effects
eating disorder
recovery.
To achieve
breakthroughs
for successful
outcomes with
your eating
disordered
clients, whether
you are a novice
clinician or an
experienced
practitioner,
you will find
the following
curriculum to be
specifically
applicable to
skill-building
and professional
self-awareness
in personal
preparation and
readiness to
treat this
challenging
patient
population.
Talking Points
Session 1: What
makes eating
disorder
treatment a
unique
specialty?
-
What ED are
and are not.
Implications
for the
patient and
the family.
-
Uniqueness
of nature of
disorder,
and of their
victims.
-
The unique
challenges
for treating
practitioners
makes ED
care a
treatment
apart
Session 2:
The therapist's
unique use of
self
-
Use of the
therapist's
self needs
to parallel
the depth
and
complexity
of the
disorder.
-
Therapist
deals with
same
uncertainties/ambiguities
within the
treatment
process as
do their
patients.
-
Handling
extreme
resistance.
-
Trust
building in
the face of
resistance
-
The
therapist as
role model,
"ideal
parent"
-
Transference
and
counter-transference
issues
-
When ED
therapists
are in ED
recovery
themselves.
-
Caring for
oneself;
finding
support
Session 3:
Differential
Diagnosis
-
Diagnosis,
an on-going
process
through
recovery,
defines not
only of
pathology,
but client's
capacity to
change,
progress,
within
current
milieu.
-
Diagnosis as
crisis
intervention;
multiplicity
of goals and
agendas
-
Decoys to
disease
recognition
-
Bringing
knowledge
and
anticipation
to the
process:
discovering
a
"constellation
within a
cluster of
stars."
-
Diagnosing
co-occurring
dysfunction
-
Managing
patient
resistance
-
Managing
trust
development;
coming back
for a second
session
Session 4: The
critical first
session
-
Who to
include? The
role of
family
members
-
Staying in
the moment
with an eye
to the past
-
The
therapist as
educator
-
The empathic
therapeutic
connection
becomes the
fabric
through
which
learning
happens
-
Assessment
strategies
-
Patient
leaves with
action plan,
referrals,
guidelines
for what
happens next
Session 5:
Partnering with
the treatment
team
-
The
therapist as
case manager
-
Working with
the
nutritionist
and MD
-
Communications,
division of
labor;
wearing many
hats
-
Using the
school as
resource
-
Involved and
educated
parents and
families
become MVPs
on the
treatment
team
-
Offering
support;
dealing with
dissention,
resistance
in other
professionals
Session 6:
Modes, Methods
and Milieus
-
Brain
science
supporting
the science
of
relationship
ass the most
important
intervention
leading to
psychiatric
change.
-
CBT,
Maudsley
Method and
the field's
own "civil
war."
Resolution
is in
integration
-
Families and
family
systems
-
Modes:
Outpatient,
IOPs,hospitalization,
residential
and halfway
housing.
-
Innovation:
Embodied
mindfulness
and other
"outside the
box" modes
that work
Session 7:
Treatment
Strategies: Nuts
and bolts
-
Engagement
ambiguity
-
Understanding
(Prochaska
and
DeClemente's)
Stages of
Change as
they relate
to ED
treatment.
-
Strategies
to motivate
and handle
resistance
-
Managing
counter-transference
-
Case
management
-
Client comes
away with
learning
from each
session
Session 8:
The brain as it
relates to
healing change;
treatment
innovation and
the mind/body
connection
-
Pioneering
brain
research and
the role of
relationship,
healing, and
the
mind-body
connection
in the
treatment of
eating
disorders.
Schore,
Siegel,
Doidge
-
Mindfulness
and
mentalizing
-
CBT and the
human
connection.
-
Embodied
mindfulness
and the
re-integration
of the self
through
somatic
education.
Feldenkrais
and ED
treatment
Session 9:
Recovery
-
Combat
training for
life itself.
Recovery
resides is
in accessing
capacities
for change
in
behaviors.
-
Prognostic
indicators
-
Timing for
recovery,
and it
implications.
-
What is ED
recovery
progress?
How much
evidence
does one
need?
-
Finding
evidence for
success in
failures;
seeing
possibility,
not
pathology.
-
Standing
firm for
complete
recovery
-
It's not
necessarily
over, when
it's over.
-
Aftercare
Session 10:
Consultation for
cases presented
by participating
students
Psychotherapist Abigail H. Natenshon has specialized in the treatment of eating disorders with individuals, families, and groups for the past
40 years. She is the author of When Your Child Has An Eating Disorder, A Step-by-Step Workbook For Parents And Other Caregivers, Jossey-Bass, 1999
and Doing What Works, An Integrative
System for the Treatment of Eeating
Disorders from Diagnosis to Recovery. Her work can be reviewed further at www.empoweredparents.com and www.empoweredkidZ.com.
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