BMJ 2001;322:343 ( 10 February )
Primary care
10-minute consultation
Binge eating
This is the second in a series of
occasional articles on common problems in primary care
Deborah Waller, general practitioner. 19 Beaumont Street, Oxford OX1 2NA
maclennan{at}beaumont19.oxongps.co.uk
A young woman has been binge eating for six months. She
looks about normal weight, but she says she feels too fat. She is desperate for help to regain control of her eating.
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What issues you should cover |
Ask about current methods of weight control
Is
she dieting at the moment? Does she make herself sick after eating? If
so, how often? Does she take laxatives or diuretics to lose weight? How
much exercise does she do? Is this extreme?
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Definitions and criteria
Binge eating
- Eating, in a discrete period of time, an amount of food that is
larger than most people would eat in a similar period under similar
circumstances
- A sense of lack of control during the episode (feeling unable to stop
eating or control what or how much to eat)
Diagnostic criteria for anorexia nervosa
- Characteristic over-concern with shape and weight, with intense
fear of becoming fat
- Active maintenance of an unduly low weight (body mass index <17.5),
achieved mainly by strict dieting, excessive exercising, and, in a
minority of cases, self induced vomiting
- Amenorrhoea for at least three months (if not taking the contraceptive
pill)
Diagnostic criteria for bulimia nervosa
- Characteristic over-concern with shape and weight
- Frequent binges (bulimic episodes)
- Extreme behaviour to prevent weight gain
such as self induced
vomiting, misuse of laxatives and diuretics, and fasting
Atypical eating disorders
- Disorders that do not fulfil the above criteria (problems related
to binge eating are common, and the term "binge eating disorder"
has been coined to describe recurrent episodes of binge eating without
extreme weight controlling behaviour)
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Ask about her attitude to her shape and weight
Is she happy
with her shape and weight? Would she like to be thinner? How important are her shape and weight to her? Is anything more important to her?
Ask about her eating habits
Does she have episodes when she
loses control of her eating? What does she eat during a binge? Is it a
true binge? (See box below.) How often does she binge?
Weight
Ask her what she weighs (less threatening in a first
consultation than weighing her). Calculate her body mass index (weight
(kg)/(height (m)2).
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Self help books
Cooper PJ. Bulimia nervosa and binge eating: a guide to
recovery. London: Robinson, 1995.
Fairburn CG. Overcoming binge eating. New York: Guilford,
1995.
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What you should do |
- You should now be able to determine the nature and severity of
her eating problem and decide on management.
- If she has a binge eating problem (including bulimia nervosa) she may
well respond to a self help programme, and this can be supervised in
primary care. In severe or complicated cases self help is unlikely to
work. Early referral for more intensive treatment is advised for the
following categories: very low weight (body mass index <17.5); eating
disorder for over five years; previous treatment failure; alcohol or
drug misuse; personality disorder; severe depression or marked suicidal
ideation; and serious medical problems (for example, diabetes).
- If self help is appropriate, suggest she buys a self help book that
includes a treatment programme
available from most bookshops (or via
the internet or by telephone) for about £10. Show her a self help book
if you have one.
- Most books give detailed information about binge eating as
well as a step by step treatment programme based on cognitive behaviour therapy. This therapy has been shown to be the most effective treatment
available for bulimia nervosa in over 40 randomised controlled trials.
Programmes usually take about 12 weeks to complete and need motivation
and commitment.
- If she wants to follow a self help programme, offer to see her
every two weeks for support and encouragement. Alternatively, this
could be done by an interested practice nurse or counsellor, or you
could simply arrange to see her again when she has completed the programme.
- Depressive symptoms may resolve without specific treatment as the
eating disorder improves, but if they persist three to four weeks into
the programme, consider prescribing antidepressant drugs and/or
referring her to a specialist.
- Studies using written self help material for the treatment of binge
eating suggest that a third to a half of patients recover using this
relatively simple and cost effective intervention, though further
research in primary care is needed. If self help does not work,
consider referring the patient to a specialist.
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Footnotes |
The
series is edited by Ann McPherson and Deborah
Waller
© BMJ 2001