ABSTRACT

Foreign Bodies: Eating Disorders, Childhood Sexual Abuse, and Trauma-Informed Treatment addresses the association between eating disorders and childhood sexual abuse, proposing a new way of treating those suffering from eating disorders who were sexually abused as children. Based on testimonies of survivors of abuse who subsequently developed eating disorders, it offers a new form of diagnosis and treatment, arguing that the eating-disorder field often ignores the traumatic sources of eating disorders, leading to some treatment programs not being commensurate, and at times conflicting, with the principles of childhood sexual abuse treatment.

The case studies used to highlight the link between childhood sexual abuse and eating disorders are presented from the perspective of the women involved, in their own words. Their voices are supplemented by Gur’s own stance as a clinician specializing in the treatment of sexual abuse and CPTSD. The book is divided into three parts: the first deals with eating disorders, childhood sexual abuse, and the association between them; the second examines the treatment of eating disorders and childhood sexual abuse; and the third offers a new form of diagnosis and treatment for eating disorders.

This book will be of great interest to researchers and postgraduate students in the eating disorder field of psychotherapy, psychology, or psychiatry, plus those studying the treatment of trauma. It will also be of interest to clinical dieticians, psychologists, social workers, doctors, nurses, eating disorder specialists, and policymakers in the mental health field, as well as eating disorders sufferers and those who care for them.

part I|114 pages

Eating disorders, childhood sexual abuse, and the link between them

chapter 1|16 pages

Eating disorders

chapter 2|13 pages

Childhood sexual abuse

From witchcraft and hysteria to CPTSD

chapter 3|7 pages

The relation between childhood sexual abuse and eating disorders

A meta-view of the professional literature

chapter 6|24 pages

The betrayed/betraying body

Eating disorders as ways of coping with the feminine body, sex, and sexuality in the wake of childhood sexual abuse

part II|60 pages

Treatment of eating disorders and childhood sexual abuse

chapter 7|49 pages

Treating eating disorders

chapter 8|9 pages

Specialist sexual abuse treatment

part III|40 pages

A new diagnosis and treatment proposal

chapter 9|12 pages

Women, ‘madness’, and a new diagnosis

chapter 10|18 pages

Treating CPTSD

chapter 12|3 pages

Epilogue