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OverviewA panel of internationally recognized eating disorder experts has expanded and fully updated this widely acclaimed book to reflect recent scientific and therapeutic developments. Stressing human physiology, treatment, and disease prevention, the authors take advantage of the new molecular understanding of the biological regulation of energy. Updated chapters review specific evidence-based and future treatment modalities, present an objective evaluation of the treatment, and identify the positives and negatives that have been seen during clinical studies, as well as cumulative data derived from clinical practice. New chapters include material on the use of the internet in the education and treatment of eating disorders and obesity, and on the role of appetite and satiety in obesity treatment, particularly with regard to the carbohydrate diet. Full Product DetailsAuthor: David J. GoldsteinPublisher: Humana Press Inc. Imprint: Humana Press Inc. Edition: Softcover reprint of hardcover 2nd ed. 2005 Dimensions: Width: 17.80cm , Height: 2.30cm , Length: 25.40cm Weight: 0.846kg ISBN: 9781617375057ISBN 10: 1617375055 Pages: 426 Publication Date: 09 November 2010 Audience: Professional and scholarly , Professional & Vocational Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Awaiting stock The supplier is currently out of stock of this item. It will be ordered for you and placed on backorder. Once it does come back in stock, we will ship it out for you. Table of ContentsBulimia Nervosa.- Bulimia Nervosa.- Counseling Patients With Bulimia Nervosa.- Pharmacological Therapy of Bulimia Nervosa.- Prevention of Eating Disorders.- Anorexia Nervosa.- Anorexia Nervosa.- Treatment of Anorexia Nervosa.- Pharmacological Therapy for Anorexia Nervosa.- The Internet and Eating Disorders.- Obesity.- Etiologies of Obesity.- Medical Consequences of Obesity and Benefits of Weight Loss.- Obese Patients With Binge-Eating Disorder.- Overview and the Future of Obesity Treatment.- The Role of Physical Activity, Exercise, and Nutrition in the Treatment of Obesity.- Lifestyle Modification in the Treatment of Obesity.- Very Low-Calorie Diets.- Pharmacotherapy of Obesity.- Combination Therapies for Obesity.- Genetics and Potential Treatments of Obesity.- The Role of Hunger and Satiety in Weight Management.- Surgical Interventions for the Management of Obesity.- Clinical Experience in a Comprehensive Weight-Management Center.- The Multidisciplinary Team in the Management of Obesity.- The Internet and Obesity Treatment.- Barriers to Treatment.- Prevention of Obesity.Reviews"""This is a comprehensive manual. It provides a wide spread of information and could be a valuable reference book for the dietetic library."" - Journal of Human Nutrition and Diabetics ""This book is a very useful, easy to understand resource for the practitioner managing patients with eating disorders and obesity. It can be used as a reference and as an aid in providing treatment strategies to health professional. I have no hesitation in recommending this updated edtion. - Weighted Numerical Score: 90 - 4 Stars!"" - Doody's Health Sciences Book Review Journal Reviews of the First edition: ""This book represents a conscientious approach to understanding and treating the psychological manifestations and medical complexities of individuals suffering from bulimia nervosa, anorexia nervosa, or obesity. The editor integrates the knowledge and experience of several respected members of the medical, clinical, and research communities to provide a comprehensive review of eating disorders and obesity...The editor provides a much-needed reference in the assessment and management of bulimia nervosa, anorexia nervosa, and obesity. The contributors emphasize pharmacological and nutritional treatment of the disorders over psychological treatment strategies. Weighted Numerical Score: 95 - ****""-Doody's Health Sciences Book Review Journal ""For both obesity and eating disorders, The Management of Eating Disorders and Obesity should achieve its goal of providing guidance to the general practitioner to improve success and end the cycle of recurrent attempts and failures. I commend it to you.""-From the foreword by Albert J. Stunkard, MD, University of Pennsylvania Medical School ""Obesity is a complex and ubiquitous problem, with no easy solution or algorithm that works for everyone. That's one reason I found The Management of Eating Disorders and Obesity to be helpful text for any family physician...Part II, the majority of the book, covers all aspects of obesity in detail...The text's chapters are short and well organized and presented in an outline fashion with numerous helpful figures and graphs to support the text...Two chapters were outstanding. First, a thorough chapter on drug therapy was ""Pharmacologic Treatment of Obesity."" Case based and patient centered, ""Treating Obesity in the Physician's Office"" was superb...The authors also offered an obesity treatment program that makes sense.""- Family Medicine ""This is an easily readable text, which presents its information in a fashion that is readily accessible to both clinicians and students. The contents are set out in four parts: Basic Concepts, Consumption, Deficiency, and Toxicity; Trace Element and Mineral Nutrition in Disease, and an index and guide to relevant literature. This format particularly suits the nutrition practitioner in patient care. However, an extensive index also enables the researcher or student to find basic information relating to individual trace elements or minerals. Each chapter provides a review of relevant recent research and an extensive reference list, which could further assist the researcher or student. For each of the nine trace elements currently considered essential ... and three major essential minerals...information regarding the recommended dietary intake, possible toxicity, estimated dietary intake, laboratory measurement, and role in health and disease is provided...The dangers in recommending dietary supplementation with trace elements and minerals is emphasized by description of the complex interactions between the dietary elements...Parts Two and Three discuss, within each chapter, all of the essential elements relevant to a particular condition or group of diseases. The particular needs of human pregnancy, human location, adolescence, and old age are provided in Part Two...In summary, this text deserves a place in the clinical nutritionist's library. The text provides an excellent mixture of current research and practical clinical nutrition, which can be used as a reference for patient care and for general trace element research, in an easily readable format."" - Clinical Chemistry" This is a comprehensive manual. It provides a wide spread of information and could be a valuable reference book for the dietetic library. - Journal of Human Nutrition and Diabetics This book is a very useful, easy to understand resource for the practitioner managing patients with eating disorders and obesity. It can be used as a reference and as an aid in providing treatment strategies to health professional. I have no hesitation in recommending this updated edtion. - Weighted Numerical Score: 90 - 4 Stars! - Doody's Health Sciences Book Review Journal Reviews of the First edition: This book represents a conscientious approach to understanding and treating the psychological manifestations and medical complexities of individuals suffering from bulimia nervosa, anorexia nervosa, or obesity. The editor integrates the knowledge and experience of several respected members of the medical, clinical, and research communities to provide a comprehensive review of eating disorders and obesity...The editor provides a much-needed reference in the assessment and management of bulimia nervosa, anorexia nervosa, and obesity. The contributors emphasize pharmacological and nutritional treatment of the disorders over psychological treatment strategies. Weighted Numerical Score: 95 - **** -Doody's Health Sciences Book Review Journal For both obesity and eating disorders, The Management of Eating Disorders and Obesity should achieve its goal of providing guidance to the general practitioner to improve success and end the cycle of recurrent attempts and failures. I commend it to you. -From the foreword by Albert J. Stunkard, MD, University of Pennsylvania Medical School Obesity is a complex and ubiquitous problem, with no easy solution or algorithm that works for everyone. That's one reason I found The Management of Eating Disorders and Obesity to be helpful text for any family physician...Part II, the majority of the book, covers all aspects of obesity in detail...The text's chapters are short and well organized and presented in an outline fashion with numerous helpful figures and graphs to support the text...Two chapters were outstanding. First, a thorough chapter on drug therapy was Pharmacologic Treatment of Obesity. Case based and patient centered, Treating Obesity in the Physician's Office was superb...The authors also offered an obesity treatment program that makes sense. - Family Medicine This is an easily readable text, which presents its information in a fashion that is readily accessible to both clinicians and students. The contents are set out in four parts: Basic Concepts, Consumption, Deficiency, and Toxicity; Trace Element and Mineral Nutrition in Disease, and an index and guide to relevant literature. This format particularly suits the nutrition practitioner in patient care. However, an extensive index also enables the researcher or student to find basic information relating to individual trace elements or minerals. Each chapter provides a review of relevant recent research and an extensive reference list, which could further assist the researcher or student. For each of the nine trace elements currently considered essential ... and three major essential minerals...information regarding the recommended dietary intake, possible toxicity, estimated dietary intake, laboratory measurement, and role in health and disease is provided...The dangers in recommending dietary supplementation with trace elements and minerals is emphasized by description of the complex interactions between the dietary elements...Parts Two and Three discuss, within each chapter, all of the essential elements relevant to a particular condition or group of diseases. The particular needs of human pregnancy, human location, adolescence, and old age are provided in Part Two...In summary, this text deserves a place in the clinical nutritionist's library. The text provides an excellent mixture of current research and practical clinical nutrition, which can be used as a reference for patient care and for general trace element research, in an easily readable format. - Clinical Chemistry This is a comprehensive manual. It provides a wide spread of information and could be a valuable reference book for the dietetic library. - Journal of Human Nutrition and Diabetics This book is a very useful, easy to understand resource for the practitioner managing patients with eating disorders and obesity. It can be used as a reference and as an aid in providing treatment strategies to health professional. I have no hesitation in recommending this updated edtion. - Weighted Numerical Score: 90 - 4 Stars! - Doody's Health Sciences Book Review Journal Reviews of the First edition: This book represents a conscientious approach to understanding and treating the psychological manifestations and medical complexities of individuals suffering from bulimia nervosa, anorexia nervosa, or obesity. The editor integrates the knowledge and experience of several respected members of the medical, clinical, and research communities to provide a comprehensive review of eating disorders and obesity...The editor provides a much-needed reference in the assessment and management of bulimia nervosa, anorexia nervosa, and obesity. The contributors emphasize pharmacological and nutritional treatment of the disorders over psychological treatment strategies. Weighted Numerical Score: 95 - **** -Doody's Health Sciences Book Review Journal For both obesity and eating disorders, The Management of Eating Disorders and Obesity should achieve its goal of providing guidance to the general practitioner to improve success and end the cycle of recurrent attempts and failures. I commend it to you. -From the foreword by Albert J. Stunkard, MD, University of Pennsylvania Medical School Obesity is a complex and ubiquitous problem, with no easy solution or algorithm that works for everyone. That's one reason I found The Management of Eating Disorders and Obesity to be helpful text for any family physician...Part II, the majority of the book, covers all aspects of obesity in detail...The text's chapters are short and well organized and presented in an outline fashion with numerous helpful figures and graphs to support the text...Two chapters were outstanding. First, a thorough chapter on drug therapy was Pharmacologic Treatment of Obesity. Case based and patient centered, Treating Obesity in the Physician's Office was superb...The authors also offered an obesity treatment program that makes sense. - Family Medicine This is an easily readable text, which presents its information in a fashion that is readily accessible to both clinicians and students. The contents are set out in four parts: Basic Concepts, Consumption, Deficiency, and Toxicity; Trace Element and Mineral Nutrition in Disease, and an index and guide to relevant literature. This format particularly suits the nutrition practitioner in patient care. However, an extensive index also enables the researcher or student to find basic information relating to individual trace elements or minerals. Each chapter provides a review of relevant recent research and an extensive reference list, which could further assist the researcher or student. For each of the nine trace elements currently considered essential ... and three major essential minerals...information regarding the recommended dietary intake, possible toxicity, estimated dietary intake, laboratory measurement, and role in health and disease is provided...The dangers in recommending dietary supplementation with trace elements and minerals is emphasized by description of the complex interactions between the dietary elements...Parts Two and Three discuss, within each chapter, all of the essential elements relevant to a particular condition or group of diseases. The particular needs of human pregnancy, human location, adolescence, and old age are provided in Part Two...In summary, this text deserves a place in the clinical nutritionist's library. The text provides an excellent mixture of current research and practical clinical nutrition, which can be used as a reference for patient care and for general trace element research, in an easily readable format. - Clinical Chemistry Author InformationTab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |