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Disordered Eating Behaviors: Identify And Treat The Underlying Trauma, Lori Kucharski – Disordered Eating Behaviors: Identify And Treat The Underlying Trauma, Disordered Eating Behaviors: Identify And Treat The Underlying Trauma download, Lori Kucharski – Disordered Eating Behaviors: Identify And Treat The Underlying Trauma review, Disordered Eating Behaviors: Identify And Treat The Underlying Trauma free torent
Lori Kucharski – Disordered Eating Behaviors: Identify And Treat The Underlying Trauma
As you perform your typical intake with a new client, you review their eating habits. There are indications of abnormal eating behaviors like yo-yo dieting and restrictive eating. The client guiltily says things like “I know I should eat healthier.â€
Your guard is up, but you quickly move along when their problems don’t take the form of a full-blown eating disorder like anorexia or bulimia.
Disordered eating behaviors are frequently hiding something deeper – serving as a coping mechanism for the unresolved trauma that lies beneath. Without addressing the trauma behind the disordered eating your client will fail to find the relief they seek.
In this recording, you’ll learn how to assess and treat disordered eating from a trauma-informed, body positive lens, for improved outcomes!
You’ll get the skills and essential treatment techniques you need for every stage of therapy, including:
Tools to diagnose and treat non-DSM-5® disordered eating
Interventions for reducing trauma symptomology related to disordered eating behaviors
Evidence-based strategies to reframe clients’ damaging relationship with food
Experience the satisfaction of helping your clients to resolve their traumas and release the unhealthy disordered eating behaviors with this powerful non-diet paradigm!
Express a thorough understanding of childhood trauma, attachment, dissociation, and the researched, causal link to disordered eating.
Utilize evidence-based, assessment tools and interventions for disordered eating, trauma, and dissociation, as well as spouses/partners and families/caregivers.
Examine the history of eating disorder treatment, disordered eating in the United States, and the socio-political/cultural factors involved in disordered eating.
Identify how to diagnose and treat non-DSM-5® disordered eating.
Evaluate personal behaviors or counter-transference that could be impeding treatment efficacy.
Apply case studies and conceptualization for incorporating body-positive terminology, awareness and intervention.
Prepare Yourself for Every Stage of the Therapy Process
Intake Strategies for Successful Therapeutic Intervention
Looking beyond anorexia, bulimia and bingeing
Conclusive questions for improving your client intake
Red flags of disordered eating
Address common issues that may not be in DSM-5®: Orthorexia, compulsive overeating, diabulimia
Digging for the roots: is the disordered behavior a result of previous trauma?
Implement Comprehensive Clinical Assessments
How to choose the right assessment for your client
Specific assessments for the spectrum of disordered eating and trauma
Additional tools for depression, trauma, or other comorbid conditions
How and when to use assessments for tracking progress
Frequency considerations – get what you need without client burnout
Collaboration within the treatment team
Techniques and Interventions to Transform Your Therapy
Non-diet paradigm to transform your client’s relationship with food
Health at Every Size (HAES)
Intuitive eating
Respect, love and nurturance for self
Reframing your approach as the clinician
Trauma-informed tactics for each stage of counseling
Trauma Specific Evaluation of Intake Procedure: what NOT to say/do
Process and treat trauma and dissociation
Determine the appropriate order of interventions
Avoid re-traumatization
Therapeutic techniques that assist in stabilization
EMDR
IFS Mapping: Address the various mindsets of each patient
Attachment focused work: Self and others
Art and sand tray interventions, journaling/logging
Therapeutic approaches for stabilization
Evaluate the Window of Tolerance
Incorporation of Polyvagal Theory to increase client stability
Prevent overwhelming trauma symptoms
Put It All into Action: Considerations for Implementation Into Your Practice
Overcome common blocks in therapy
Systemic vs. individual: When to include family/partners
Self of the therapist exercise: Countertransference, bias
Case discussions and video demonstrations
Effective documentation for ongoing treatment
Risks and limitations