Behavior OnLine EMDR Forum Archive, 1999

    Re: EMDR for Eating Disorders
    Bonnie Kushner Ph.D.> · 1/29/00 at 2:12 pm ET


    The following is a June 1998 article of mine which appeared in the Toronto Hospital
    National Eating Disorder Information Centre Bulletin about eating
    disorders.
    >

    >EMDR: A New Therapy For Eating Disorders


    >The National Eating Disorder Information Centre has published many articles
    >in The Bulletin about various types of treatment for those struggling with
    >food and weight preoccupation and / or serious eating disorders. When
    >seeking help, it is important to be informed about the latest treatment
    >methods in order to be able to make informed choices.
    >
    >EMDR (Eye Movement Desensitization and Reprocessing) is a therapeutic
    >technique that came into being for the treatment of Post Traumatic Stress
    >Disorder. After being trained in its use I realized that this was a method
    >of therapy that would also help those with eating disorders. I contacted
    >some researchers in the United States and was told that the use of EMDR for
    >those suffering from eating disorders was very effective. And so I began to
    >use it with a number of clients. The results are often dramatic. I believe
    >that as we gain understanding and experience, EMDR will become one of the
    >leading therapies for those who suffer from eating disorders.
    >
    >EMDR is a therapeutic technique that treats the disturbing experiences from
    >the past that underlie many problems in the present. It is an effective way
    >to deal with stress and anxiety arising from unresolved negative
    >experiences. Most experts agree that there is a high correlation between the
    >development of an eating disorder and with unresolved trauma from the past.
    >To find true relief for the sufferer we must find these unresolved problems
    >and treat them. When this is done correctly, using the EMDR protocol, the
    >continuance of the eating disorder often disappears.
    >
    >Even though EMDR is less than ten years old, it is now in use by over 17,000
    >practitioners around the world. EMDR is not a panacea, and there is still
    >some uncertainty about exactly how it works. Dr. Francine Shapiro, a senior
    >fellow at the Mental Research Institute in Palo Alto, California, is its
    >originator. She believes that the mind, like the body, has its own healing
    >system and when that mechanism is not fully functioning, EMDR can somehow
    >unlock it.
    >
    >EMDR evolved from a chance observation made by Dr. Shapiro. She had been
    >walking in a park, thinking about old painful memories. She noticed that
    >while she was recalling those memories, her eyes were going into a
    >spontaneous back-and-forth rapid eye movement (REM). She began to feel
    >relieved. The disturbing thoughts she had been thinking about stopped having
    >a negative charge. She was fascinated by what she had experienced and
    >decided to investigate the phenomenon. In her book "Eye Movement
    >Desensitization and Reprocessing" published in 1995, she describes how she
    >took a group of twenty-two people who were rape victims, molestation
    >survivors and Vietnam war veterans, all suffering from the symptoms of
    >post-traumatic stress disorder. She divided them into two groups, the
    >treatment group and the control group. The people in the treatment group had
    >a single complete EMDR session while those in the control group also had a
    >single session of the EMDR protocol but without the eye movements. All of
    >the people in the treatment group reported that after the session, they felt
    >better and some of their symptoms had gone. Three months later those
    >symptoms had not returned. Those in the control group reported no change in
    >their symptoms. This was the first study of its kind.
    >
    >Dr. Bessel van der Kolk, a Harvard neurological researcher, is doing brain
    >scan imaging on people suffering from post-traumatic stress disorder using
    >EMDR. He has found that two areas in the brain show increased activity after
    >an EMDR session and it is now being hypothesized that recovery from
    >traumatic events may depend on a brain intrahemispheric pipeline being
    >opened up so that the traumatic memories may be processed. The eye
    >movements may actually be causing the neurophysiological system to
    >rebalance thus leading to memories being stored in a healthier way.
    >
    >The current EMDR model states that as information comes in, the brain works
    >at a neurophysiological level to restore its own balance. It takes in new
    >information, dissipates it, processes it, and tries to adjust and
    >accommodate it. Unresolved trauma can be thought of as information in the
    >system that has not been processed, causing an imbalance. Unprocessed
    >information remains constantly available. Therefore new information coming
    >in will become contaminated with whatever is there that has not been
    >processed. The information from the traumatic event that has not been
    >dissipated, is locked in the nervous system and causes a generalization to
    >other events. The negative feelings and thoughts that occurred at the time
    >of the original event still exist with the same intensity today. As EMDR
    >sessions take place, the unprocessed information from the traumatic event
    >gets stored in the brain in an appropriate manner and stops having a
    >negative effect on the person's life in the present. One client told me "it
    >is like getting rid of all the junk. Somehow it doesn't bother me any more".
    >
    >Many sufferers of eating disorders experience the following kinds of
    >problems: disturbance in body image, misinterpretations of internal and
    >external stimuli, inaccuracy in the way hunger is experienced, feelings of
    >inferiority and an overwhelming sense of personal ineffectiveness in their
    >lives. EMDR lends itself well to these kinds of problems. In addition,
    >people often have problems such as phobias or negative attitudes about
    >themselves or tendencies to sabotage themselves when they are on the verge
    >of doing something they would really like to do. Even with a clear
    >understanding of the senselessness of the behaviour and quite often even
    >after years of psychotherapy, these problems persist. EMDR leads to the
    >rapid resolution of these kinds of problems. It seems to bridge the
    >mind-body connection.
    >
    >Many people struggling with unresolved trauma from the past may have an
    >understanding of how their past experiences are affecting their behaviour in
    >the present and yet are still not able to make changes. It seems as if the
    >client understands the problem, knows the solution and yet is powerless to
    >act on the knowledge that would change his or her behavior. Many clients
    >tell me that they know they ought to stop bingeing and purging and always
    >have the best intentions and yet can't seem to stop this behavior. EMDR
    >often helps.
    >
    >In an EMDR session, the client is asked to focus on a specific incident and
    >move his or her eyes back and forth many times, following the quickly-moving
    >fingers of the therapist. The eye movements are similar to the Rapid Eye
    >Movement known as REM which occurs while a person is asleep and dreaming.
    >EMDR focuses not just on a person's troubling feelings, but also on the
    >thoughts, physical sensations and behaviour patterns that are related to
    >those feelings. The person integrates the emotion about the upsetting event
    >("I am in danger") by processing it and storing it with a more appropriate
    >emotion ("It is over, I am safe now"). This usually leads to a marked
    >decrease in anxiety. Many of what we consider to be disorders are actually a
    >result of the way information is stored in the brain. Healing begins when
    >we unlock this information and allow it to emerge. EMDR seems to have a
    >direct biological effect on the nervous system and somehow allows the
    >information to be processed correctly.
    >
    >The basic protocol of EMDR involves eight phases of treatment. All eight
    >phases can be completed within one session but the number of sessions needed
    >can vary from one to many.
    >
    >1) Client history: The therapist obtains information about the client's
    >current level of functioning, current symptoms, and assesses the client's
    >stability, negative belief systems and secondary gain issues. With this
    >information, targets are established for treatment
    >
    >2) Preparation of the Client: Tasks in this phase include rapport building,
    >establishing methods for helping the client handle incomplete sessions, and
    >helping the client build up ego strength.
    >
    >3) Assessment: This involves helping the client decide upon the scene to
    >target and finding out the client's negative cognitions.
    >
    >4) Desensitization: Series of eye movements are used to reduce the negative
    >affect of the targeted memory.
    >
    >5) Installation: Positive cognitions are installed using the eye movements.
    >Negative thoughts are replaced with positive ones.
    >
    >6) Double check: Call up the original scene and see if any residual
    >unresolved feelings remain.
    >
    >7) Closure: Help client re-establish equilibrium and stability.
    >
    >8) Re-evaluation: This is done at the beginning of the next session to see
    >whether the treatment effects are being maintained.
    >
    >
    >Beth is a 24 year old woman who came to see me because she had been
    >diagnosed as having bulimia and was unable to stop bingeing and vomiting.
    >She told me she was constantly obsessing about food. Her symptoms had not
    >improved even after having been in therapy with a psychiatrist for a number
    >of years. Using EMDR we focused on various negative incidents that had
    >happened to her as a child and that seemed to be having an affect on her
    >self-image and on her eating behaviour. During the first and second sessions
    >she remembered many times when she had been teased and made to feel
    >inadequate. She focused on many of these incidents while doing the eye
    >movements. She reported feeling much less anxious and depressed almost
    >immediately. Towards the end of the fourth session she started to cry and
    >then laugh and said she realized that she was well on her way to recovery.
    >Recently she told me "It's a miracle, I don't think about food all the time
    >any more, and I don't even have to vomit any more".
    >
    >

    Replies:
    • Re: EMDR for Eating Disorders, by Mary J. Harrell, LCSW, 06/06/00

    Index Next Previous Help



    | Behavior OnLine Home Page | Disclaimer |

    Copyright © 1996-2004 Behavior OnLine, Inc. All rights reserved.