Clinically reviewed by Kara Becker, LMFT, CEDs, National Director of Eating Disorder Programs
Teen eating disorders can be physically and emotionally devastating. Symptoms such as extreme weight loss, changes in appearance, and physical exhaustion are dangerous for teens and frightening for parents.
Newport Academy’s specialized teen eating disorder programming addresses immediate nutritional needs while treating primary mental health issues, such as trauma, anxiety, or depression. Our whole-person approach ensures that each client’s medical, dietary, psychological, relational, and academic needs are taken into account.
We also provide eating disorder treatment for young adults. Learn more.
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Table of Contents
Teen Eating Disorder Treatment at Newport Academy
Our specialized residential treatment for adolescents with eating disorders (available at some locations) provides both dietary and clinical care, delivered by a team that includes medical doctors, psychiatrists, nurses, board-registered dietitians, certified eating disorder specialists, individual and family therapists, counselors, experiential therapists, and academic teachers and tutors.
All on-site staff, from our doctors and clinicians to our culinary teams and residential care coordinators, are trained in eating disorder awareness and Health at Every Size® (HAES) principles. These principles include respectful care, weight inclusivity, and eating for well-being rather than weight control.
Moreover, our approach to adolescent eating disorder treatment supports every aspect of a teen’s well-being. In addition to medical and psychiatric care, teens participate in multiple therapeutic modalities, academic programming, and executive functioning and life skills training.
Each teen’s structured eating disorder treatment plan includes:
- Psychiatric and medical care, including medication management, as needed, for underlying mental health issues such as anxiety and depression
- Initial dietary screening, followed by ongoing individual check-ins and groups with board-registered dietitians
- Structured dietary and relapse prevention plan to take home upon discharge, so teens can maintain and build on gains made in treatment
- Individual therapy to process underlying trauma and build self-knowledge and healthy coping skills
- Body image groups and eating disorder–specific homework using Cognitive Behavioral Therapy and Dialectical Behavioral Therapy skills
- Family therapy to restore connection and trust, so teens with eating and mental health disorders feel safe turning to parents for support
- Experiential therapy, such as rock climbing, kayaking, and yoga, that allows teens to build a positive connection with their body and its abilities
- Strength-based academic component to keep teens on track with educational and career goals while receiving the treatment they need
Teen Eating Disorder Statistics
More teenage eating disorder stats:
- The number of ER visits for teen eating disorders doubled in the first year of the pandemic.
- 81 percent of 10-year-olds worry about getting fat.
- Close to half of teen girls engage in disordered eating.
- Among high school students, 44 percent of girls and 15 percent of boys are trying to lose weight at any given time.
- Only 10 percent of people with eating disorders receive treatment.
- Every 62 minutes, a person dies because of an eating disorder.
When teens repeatedly exhibit a number of these behaviors, parents should investigate further. Warning signs of a teen eating disorder need to be heeded as quickly as possible.
The Most Common Types of Teen Eating Disorders
Teen Anorexia Nervosa
Anorexia nervosa is the most well-known eating disorder. In addition, it has a high death rate resulting from starvation, metabolic collapse, or suicide. From the onset, teenage anorexia is defined by three key features. An adolescent suffering from teen anorexia eats less and less, has a distorted body image, and is intensely afraid of gaining weight or becoming fat. This is true even though the teen may have an average or low weight for their age, height, and gender.
However, adolescents can suffer from teen anorexia nervosa without appearing anorexic. They may severely restrict their caloric intake but maintain a relatively normal weight for some time. Even if a teen with anorexia is not drastically losing weight, it’s important to catch the teen eating disorder early, to prevent permanent physical damage. Therefore, knowing the signs and symptoms of teen anorexia can help.
Bulimia in Adolescents
Teen Binge-Eating Disorder
As with teen anorexia and teen bulimia, early intervention is critical.
Risk Factors and Causes of Teen Eating Disorders
Underlying Mental Health Issues
Genetics
Brain Functioning
Perfectionism and Other Psychological Factors
Childhood Trauma
Social Factors and Peer Pressure
Being teased by peers is a substantial risk factor for developing a teen eating disorders. In addition, teens constantly see idealized images of thin bodies on social media, in magazines, and on TV. This can trigger disordered eating or a full-blown eating disorder.
Do Boys Experience Teen Eating Disorders?
Boys also struggle with what’s known as bigorexia. Teens with bigorexia, also known as muscle dysmorphia, believe that they are small and skinny, despite being typically or even unusually muscular. They compulsively work out and control their diet to increase their muscularity.
Moreover, gender is not predictive of whether someone will develop an eating disorder. Those who identify as LGBTQ+ experience higher rates of eating disorders than their heterosexual and cisgender peers. Research shows trans and nonbinary individuals may be at greater risk. Trans teens often struggle with eating disorders as part of gender dysphoria. Transgender college students report experiencing disordered eating at approximately four times the rate of their cisgender classmates. In addition, gay and bisexual boys are significantly more likely to fast, vomit, or take laxatives or diet pills to control their weight.
The Importance of Early Intervention for Teen Eating Disorders
Even when not visually apparent, a teen eating disorder can be life threatening and requires immediate action. It cannot be ignored as a passing phase. In most cases, the longer an eating disorder continues, the more dangerous it becomes.
Newport Academy’s Integrated Approach to Teenage Eating Disorder Treatment
Dietary Services with Registered Nutritionists
Psychiatric Care and Medication Management
Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT)
Dialectical Behavioral Therapy
Acceptance and Commitment Therapy (ACT)
Experiential Therapeutic Modalities
Attachment-Based Family Therapy (ABFT)
Strengths-Based Academics
Eye Movement Desensitization and Reprocessing (EMDR)
Life Skills Program
Insurances We Accept
Our Accreditations
Newport holds the Gold Seal of Approval® from The Joint Commission, the nation’s oldest and largest healthcare accrediting body, and is affiliated with a wide range of national organizations and certification bodies.
Frequently Asked Questions
What eating disorders are often identified in adolescence?
Why do some individuals develop eating disorders during adolescence?
What are two approaches that are useful for addressing eating disorders among adolescents?
What percentage of adolescents have an eating disorder?
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