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Schema-informed CBT for anorexia nervosa: a case series for patients with chronic unmet need
Journal article   Peer reviewed

Schema-informed CBT for anorexia nervosa: a case series for patients with chronic unmet need

Karina L. Allen, Yael Brown, Rosiel Elwyn, Danielle Glennon, Leah Holland, Jessica Safadi and Helen Startup
The Cognitive Behaviour Therapist, Vol.18, pp.1-25
2025
Appears in  Thompson Institute Research Collection

Abstract

Psychiatry (incl. psychotherapy) Clinical and health psychology anorexia nervosa cognitive behavioural therapy eating disorders schema therapy case series Thompson Institute Special Collection Other Collaborations Ketamine UniSC Diversity Area - Disability and Inclusion
Anorexia nervosa (AN) is often regarded as ‘difficult to treat’. This may in part be due to co-occurring diagnoses and traits that are less directly targeted either at the point of formulation or in treatment. Schema therapy may be suitable for individuals with AN who have not benefited from first-line interventions. It offers a schema formulation and change techniques that target broader characterological ways of being. However, schema therapy is typically 18 months duration or longer, and therefore not well-suited to services with resource constraints. We present a schema-informed cognitive behavioural therapy (CBT) approach for AN, based on a formulation that encapsulates the experience of chronic unmet emotional need and which uses cognitive and behavioural techniques to target schema and schema mode change over a relatively brief treatment. We argue that the experiential techniques of schema therapy can augment the change process for those with AN, by gradually turning up the ‘emotional heat’ and increasing tolerance for emotion. After outlining this proposed model, we present findings from a case series of n=11 patients with AN or atypical AN. All patients had received first-line eating disorder treatment(s) previously and n=8/11 had prior experience of day or in-patient treatment. Results supported the acceptability and feasibility of schema-informed CBT for AN: no patients discontinued treatment early, mean number of sessions was 31 (SD 10.28), and patient satisfaction was high. Improvements were seen in AN psychopathology, depression/anxiety, schemas and schema modes, mostly with medium effect sizes. We propose areas for future research and consideration.

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