Advance Praise for How to Nourish Your Child Through an Eating Disorder
A key tenet of family-based treatment (FBT) for adolescent anorexia nervosa (AN) is to empower parents so that they (the parents) can bring about weight restoration for their teen. This process is a delicate onethe clinician is to support the parents efforts without telling them what to do, yet steering them in the right direction. Parents and providers can get tripped up in this task as weight restoration seldom follows a straight upward trajectory. A solid understanding of the nutritional requirements for recovery in AN is key to getting this task done. That said, the foundation model of FBT does not specify how best to integrate nutritional expertise in this treatment. This book offers a terrific start to this processit will inform parents rather than prescribe to parents. Crosbie and Sterling take great care to use their nutritional expertise to complement the key FBT tenets. As a result, How to Nourish Your Child Through an Eating Disorder will be a helpful tool not only to parents, but also to the many clinicians who are tasked with supporting parents in their struggle to help their child overcome an eating disorder.
Daniel Le Grange, PhD, Benioff UCSF Professor in Childrens Health and Eating Disorders director, Department of Psychiatry and UCSF Weill Institute for Neurosciences, University of California, San Francisco, and emeritus professor of psychiatry and behavioral neuroscience, the University of Chicago
For the parents of patients with eating disorders, this book, written by two prominent nutritionists, provides a comprehensive understanding of the illness and a practical approach to the refeeding process. Overall, an excellent summary of what parents need to know.
Martin Fisher, MD, chief, Division of Adolescent Medicine, Cohen Childrens Medical Center, Northwell Health
I highly recommend this book to any parent whose child has an eating disorder! How To Nourish Your Child Through an Eating Disorder provides concrete toolsbased in sciencein a friendly, compassionate, and easy-to-understand way.
Jenni Schaefer, bestselling author of Life Without Ed; Goodbye Ed, Hello Me; and Almost Anorexic
Parents: This book is your play-by-play for exactly how you can help your child heal their mind and body with food!
Rebecca Scritchfield, RDN, EP-C, author of Body Kindness
Casey Crosbie and Wendy Sterlings practical book is an innovative and user-friendly resource on how to nourish a child with an eating disorder back to health. Crosbie and Sterling provide an important adjunctive approach to FBT, the first-line outpatient treatment for eating disorders. This excellent resource offers helpful strategies to empower parents and caregivers to play an active role in their adolescents recovery.
Debra K. Katzman, MD, FRCPC, professor of pediatrics, the Hospital for Sick Children and University of Toronto, and director of health science research, University of Toronto MD Program
Family-based treatment is extremely effective, yet difficult. How to Nourish Your Child Through an Eating Disorder provides just the help parents need to ensure their child will recover at home.
Marcia Herrin, EdD, MPH, RDN, FAED, author of the Parents Guide to Eating Disorders and Nutrition Counseling in the Treatment of Eating Disorders
Offering necessary support to families and caregivers facing an eating disorder, this book will be a lifesaver. Casey Crosbie and Wendy Sterling offer clarity and specific guidance on how to navigate the three phases of FBT with their Plate-by-Plate approach. Feeding any child is a phenomenal task, and when facing ED it really does take a villagecrucially, including a registered dietitian (RD). Im thrilled to have this resource to share with families who are coaching with me through this journey.
Becky Henry, CPCC, ACC, founder and president, Hope Network, LLC, Eating Disorder Caregiver Support
Providing relief for parents and clinicians, Crosbie and Sterling not only guide you on how to put together balanced plates to aid in the restoration of health, but also cover such topics as medical stability, when to sit your child out from exercise, and what to do when your childs old clothes no longer fit. The approach shines in coaching parents on the ultimate pursuit of food freedom for their childand it works.
Signe Darpinian, LMFT, CEDS-S, president of San Francisco Bay Area iaedp chapter and coauthor of No Weigh!! A Teens Guide to Body Image, Food, and Emotional Wisdom
Crosbie and Sterling, registered dietitians and experts in the treatment of eating disorders, have created a comprehensive yet easy-to-follow guide that addresses both the nutritional and emotional aspects of recovery. The practical and user-friendly tips are sure to help any family navigate the various phases of reducing fear and forming new and positive relationships with food.
Carrie Spindel Bashoff, PsyD, child and adolescent clinical psychologist, adjunct assistant professor NYU School of Medicine
Some of us are adrift in a fog of uncertainty at each meal we prepare. This book gives answers without tying us up in rules. Add this to your family-based treatment library for clear, competent guidance on food, exercise, weight, and healthand on what to serve to rebuild your childs flexibility, normalize their attitude toward eating, and prepare them for independence.
Eva Musby, parent and author of Anorexia and Other Eating Disorders: How to Help Your Child Eat Well and Be Well
This book is a must read for any parent with a child struggling with an unbalanced relationship with food. Wendy and Casey have developed a straightforward approach that equips and empowers parents to feed their child and achieve greater food freedom. They illustrate how parents can challenge fear foods through exposures, reduce obsessiveness related to food, and facilitate a more wholesome relationship to food, supporting a childs recovery through every step!
Riley Nickols, PhD, sport psychologist and director of the Victory Program
An essential resource for parents of children struggling to overcome an eating disorder. This book boils down the science of eating disorder recovery with practical tips for every stage of healing. I wish my parents had access to this book when I was going through my eating disorder.
Kristina Saffran, cofounder and CEO, Project HEAL
When I was suffering with an eating disorder my parents struggled to find a book that could provide support and strategies both for themselves and for me. Todays parents are lucky to have How to Nourish Your Child Through an Eating Disorder, which provides great insight into how to effectively nourish your child at home through the innovative Plate-by-Plate approach. Its sure to help countless families!
Liana Rosenman, cofounder of Project HEAL
With this invaluable resource, leading nutritionists Crosbie and Sterling coach parents on how to feed their child balanced meals using the Plate-by-Plate approach, helping them navigate the complex demands of the eating disorderand empowering them to fight back.
Laura Kimeldorf, MD, psychiatrist, New York City
Food morphs into a crippling fear when an eating disorder develops. This Plate-by-Plate approach offers a way for parents and other caregivers to guide their loved one to dismantling the fearand help renourish their mind and body and get their life back on track. I wish this had been available to my parents when I was a kid.
June Alexander, PhD, author of Using Writing as a Therapy for Eating Disorders and coauthor with Daniel Le Grange of
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