Concept

Enhanced Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT-E) for Eating Disorders

Enhanced cognitive behavior therapy (CBT-E) is a transdiagnostic approach that is designed to treat multiple clinical conditions, including the complete list of eating disorders identified in DSM-V, such as anorexia nervosa, bulimia nervosa, binge eating disorder (BED), among others. It is different from typical CBT in that it aims to treat the underlying pathological factors contributing to several disorders, rather than any one condition.

CBT-E is comprised of four stages, yet the details of each stage differ based on the individual patient and their clinical circumstances.

The overarching goal of CBT-E is to assist the patient in first acknowledging their harmful eating patterns and body-image concerns so that they can eventually begin actively participating in therapeutic sessions targeted at addressing the emotions, beliefs/thoughts, and behaviors (e.g., body-image concerns, low self-esteem stressful life events, interpersonal relationship conflicts, etc.) sustaining their condition.

After the patient has begun to heal, CBT-E treatment provides them with coping mechanisms to manage challenges to their recovery so that they can maintain their progress.

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Updated 2026-05-02

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Clinical Practice of Psychology