Management & Psychological Treatment of Eating Disorders - ADELAIDE
Management & Psychological Treatment of Eating Disorders - ADELAIDE
ANZAED
About this event
This three-day workshop presented by ANZAED is focused on adults with severe and complex eating disorders, including their emotional, cognitive, behavioural features and medical and psychiatric dangers. It includes key elements from the ANZAED practice standards for the psychological treatment of severe and complex eating disorders. The workshop is designed to prepare a clinician to accept referrals under the new Medicare item numbers for eating disorders.
Management & Psychological Treatment of Eating Disorders in Adults in the following cities & dates:
- Melbourne 13-15 February
- Newcastle 5-7 March
- Adelaide 19-21 March
- Brisbane 26-28 March
- Sydney 23-25 July
Workshop Overview:
These workshops are aimed at health professionals who have completed a relevant (mental) health degree and have training and experience in psychopathology and psychotherapy for a range of disorders, particularly CBT, and who are interested in providing treatment for adults with eating disorders. The workshop is designed to give those clinicians the core skills to assess and plan treatment, establish a safe therapeutic framework to manage risks and comorbidities, and then conduct effective treatments. The focus is on adults with severe and complex eating disorders, especially anorexia nervosa and bulimia nervosa. The workshop commences with crucial information about the emotional, cognitive and behavioural features of the eating disorders and moves to cover the medical and psychiatric dangers associated with this condition. The training curriculum includes key elements from the ANZAED Practice Standards for the treatment of severe and complex eating disorders that are in development. The comprehensive three-day workshop is designed to prepare a clinician to be ready to accept referrals under the new Medicare item numbers for eating disorders.
Participants will learn how to conduct a thorough assessment and establish a safe therapeutic modality to deal with the medical and other dangers that are associated with eating disorders. Whilst CBT constitutes many of the core treatment skills at the centre of the workshop, additional clinical skills that are also core principles of evidence-based eating disorders treatment recommended across multiple clinical guidelines will be taught over the three days. This will include managing the therapeutic relationship, understanding various ways to enhance motivation (including driving for early behaviour change), the need to involve wider social systems and importance of multi-disciplinary involvement. The workshop includes lecture-style content, group discussions, role-play exercises and video and in vivo demonstrations. Extensive handouts will be provided on assessment, formulations, management approaches, treatment techniques and new Medicare Guidelines.
Speaker: Tracey Wade (B.Sc. Hons; M.Clin.Psychol, Ph.D.)
Tracey a clinical psychologist, teacher and researcher specialising in eating disorders and perfectionism. in 2016 she was made an Inaugural Honorary Fellow of the Australian Association for Cognitive and Behaviour Therapy, and in 2019 she was the recipient of the Australia and New Zealand Academy of Eating Disorders Distinguished Achievement Award. She has over 200 peer-reviewed publications and heads the Flinders University Services for Eating Disorders (FUSED)
Speaker: Randall Long (BMBS FRANZCP)
Randall is a Senior Staff Specialist at the Department of Psychiatry in Flinders Medical Centre and a Senior Lecturer at Flinders University in Adelaide, South Australia. He is the Head of Unit of the Statewide Eating Disorder Service. He leads a multidisciplinary team to provide care to patients with Eating Disorders. His research interests include understanding the treatments that help patients recover from eating disorders and lead healthy lives.
Speaker: Eva Vall (B.SC. Hons; Ph.D.)
Eva is a clinical psychologist who specialises in the assessment and treatment of individuals with an eating disorder. Eva’s Ph.D. research focused on factors affecting treatment outcomes in both adults and adolescents, and she has published and presented her research in this field. Eva previously worked at the Statewide Eating Disorder Service in both a clinical and research roles, and she now works primarily in her busy private practice.