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Organised by

Kindly supported by

The 10th London International


Eating Disorders Conference

Eating
Disorders
2011
A three-day practical
conference & exhibition
London
29, 30 & 31 March 2011

Conference organisers
Prof. Bryan Lask (UK/Nor) Dr Rachel Bryant-Waugh (UK)


40 years of medical education
Eating Diso
Dear Colleagues
We take great pleasure in inviting you to join us for the 10th London International Conference on Eating
Disorders. Each of the past nine conferences exceeded our expectations in terms of quality of presentations and
numbers attending. For Eating Disorders 2009 we had more than 650 participants from all over the world and
we are understandably proud of just how international the meeting has become. We are confident that Eating
Disorders 2011 will be even more exciting and are delighted that so many distinguished clinicians and researchers
will be joining the faculty.
As usual the very latest ideas and research findings will be presented by leaders in the field. We are delighted that our
keynote speaker will be Prof. Simon Baron-Cohen, internationally renowned for his work on the male and female
brains. In addition, there will be plenary sessions on men and eating disorders, the therapeutic alliance, coping and
resilience, as well as clinical workshops, short paper sessions and posters.
Once again the conference will be held at one of London’s premier academic institutions, The Institute of
Education, University of London. Situated in the heart of London’s sightseeing and shopping districts with the
British Museum a few paces away and close proximity to all mainline connections, it will allow you to make the
most of your visit to London whilst at the conference. As always we will be hosting social gatherings on the first and
second nights of the conference. We look forward to offering you our personal welcome to London in March 2011.

Very warm regards


Prof. Bryan Lask Dr Rachel Bryant-Waugh

New RRU & HDU Services


opening Spring 2010

Eating Disorders are extraordinarily complex illness that present with abnormalities
in physical and psychological functioning. The physical complications have the
potential to cause permanent damage and in some cases are life threatening.
They require a comprehensive treatment programme including medical, psychiatric,
psychological, social and educational interventions.
The Ellern Mede service for eating disorders has a very successful existing programme
at Ellern Mede, Totteridge. This is based upon the use of the therapeutic milieu and
takes a very broad-based approach to assessment and management, with the aim
of helping young people with eating disorders to develop new skills to enable them to Ellern Mede Totteridge
manage their feelings and to overcome their eating disorder. We are now opening two
new programmes at a new site, Ellern Mede, Ridgeway. The first is a Rapid Response
Unit (RRU) which will admit patients within 24 hours of referral, stabilise their physical and
psychological states as rapidly as possible, and transfer elsewhere within 4-6 weeks. The
second is a high dependency unit (HDU) which will admit patients whose illness requires
one to one nursing and/or who require admission under mental health legislation.
The aim will be to improve the patients health and dependency needs sufficiently for
transfer to a regular eating disorder unit.
Ellern Mede Ridgeway
Ellern Mede Totteridge, 31 Totteridge Common London N20 8LR
Ellern Mede Ridgeway, Holcombe Hill The Ridgeway Mill Hill NW7 4HX
T 08444 725 120 E info@ellernmede.org www.ellernmede.org
Calls charged at a maximum of 4p per minute from UK land lines. Mobile charges vary.
orders 2011
Kindly supported by

Objectives
• To update participants
on the latest research and
developments in evidence
based practice
• To provide information
about research and clinical
activity around the world
Conference organisers and programme committee
• To provide an opportunity
for clinicians to share skills The programme has been put together by an international
and experiences committee of experts in eating disorders.

• To equip participants Keynote speaker


with practical skills and Simon Baron-Cohen (UK)
techniques for the assessment
and management of eating Conference organisers
disorders Rachel Bryant-Waugh (UK) Bryan Lask (UK/NOR)
Who should attend? Programme committee
Eating Disorders 2011 will Anne E. Becker (USA) Johan Vanderlinden (Bel)
appeal to all medical and Martina de Zwaan (Ger) Scott Crow (USA)
healthcare professionals who are
interested in the assessment and Plenary themes
treatment of people with eating 1. Men and eating disorders
disorders and who would like to 2. The therapeutic alliance
learn more about the very latest 3. Coping and resilience
developments in this field.
These will include: Conference format
• Counsellors The 3 day conference combines plenary sessions, concurrent sessions,
• Dieticians short papers, training workshops, posters and special interest group
• Family Therapists meetings. These will convey the very latest ideas and research findings
• General Practitioners in the field of eating disorders. The aim is to encourage maximum
• Family Physicians response from participants and a lively exchange of ideas.
• Nurses
Concurrent sessions
• Occupational Therapists
• Paediatricians The conference offers delegates the opportunity to choose six 90
• Physicians minute sessions out of a total of 36 to maximise the relevance of the
• Physiotherapists meeting to each individual. A total of 36 clinical skills workshops
• Psychiatrists will be available on a wide range of topics.
• Psychologists
• Social workers 3 easy ways to book
• Self help group facilitators
* Complete and return the registration form on back page
• Trainees
• Teachers ( 020 7501 6762
• Youth workers 8 www.mahealthcareevents.co.uk
Eating Diso
Tuesday, 29th March
3: A relational approach to eating disorders: working
08.00-09.30 Registration and refreshments with the internalised other
Emily Strang, Shila Khan (UK)
09.30-09.45 Welcome and opening remarks:
Rachel Bryant-Waugh (UK) and Bryan Lask (UK/Nor) 4: Assessing and managing suicidality in people with
eating disorders
09.45-10.30 KEYNOTE ADDRESS: Anorexia nervosa Scott Crow (USA)
and autism spectrum conditions: what 5: Preparing the ground for successful treatment:
are the links? attending to interactions and expectations
Simon Baron-Cohen (UK) Rachel Bryant-Waugh, Hannah Turner (UK)

10.30-11.00 Refreshments and exhibition viewing 6: Special interest group: Neuroscience


Ian Frampton (UK/Nor)
11.00-12.30 PLENARY 1: Men and eating
17.30-19.30 Official poster viewing and drinks
disorders reception
Chair: Janet Treasure (UK)
i. Men as partners in illness and treatment of adult Wednesday, 30th March
women with eating disorders
Walter Vandereycken (Bel) 08.30-09.15 Registration, refreshments, poster and
ii. Body image issues in male patients
exhibition viewing
Harrison G. Pope (USA)
09.15-10.45 PLENARY 2:
iii. Fathers The therapeutic alliance
Tony Jaffa (UK) Chair: Scott Crow (USA)
12.30-14.00 Lunch and exhibition viewing i. Accuracy, empathy and alliance in the treatment of
eating disorders: a clinical perspective
14.00-15.30 CONCURRENT SESSION 1 Kelly Vitousek (USA)

1: How to run a mindful eating workshop ii. The therapeutic alliance in the treatment of eating
Naomi Crafti (Aus) disorders: can it make a difference?
Johan Vanderlinden (Bel)
2: The role of DBT and the use of DBT strategies in the
treatment of eating disorders iii. Cultural differences and impact on the therapeutic
Lorraine Bell, Sheila Burton (UK) alliance
Anne Becker (USA)
3: Pregnancy and motherhood in eating disorders:
what do women and their babies need? 10.45-11.15 Refreshments, poster and exhibition viewing
Nadia Micali, Abigail Easter, Emma Taborelli (UK)
11.15-12.45 SHORT PAPER SESSION 1:
4: Managing compulsive exercise among eating Intervention/treatment A
disordered patients
Caroline Meyer (UK), Stephen Touyz (Aus), Lorin Chair: Fernando Fernandez-Aranda (Spa)
Taranis (UK), Jon Arcelus (UK) i. Developing cognitive remediation therapy for
adolescents with anorexia nervosa: a phase 1 proof of
5: Cognitive remediation therapy for children and
concept study
adolescents with eating disorders Camilla Lindvall (Nor), Isabelle Owen (UK), Leah
Bryan Lask (UK/Nor), Isabel Owen (UK), Wood (UK), Hind Alkhairulla (Nor/UK), Ian
Camilla Lindvall (Nor) Frampton (UK/Nor), Bryan Lask (UK/Nor)
6: Approaches to managing the effects of trauma on ii. Cannabinoid CB1 receptor agonist treatment in
eating disorders and their treatment severe chronic anorexia nervosa
Stephen Wonderlich (USA), Øyvind Rø (Nor) Alin Andries, Kirsten Hørder, Valgerdur Gram, Kim
Brixen, René Støving (Den)
15.30-16.00 Refreshments and exhibition viewing
iii. The feasibility of a novel 3D laser body scanning
16.00-17.30 CONCURRENT SESSION 2 method as an adjunctive psychological treatment for
eating disordered patients
1: Working psychologically with severe and enduring Philip Crockett, Susan Simpson, Julie Young,
anorexia nervosa Lindsey Slowey, Susan Klein, Kirstin Harrild, Philip
Bryony Bamford (UK) Benson, Amanda Lee, Arthur Stewart (UK)

2: Family treatment apartments in the treatment of iv. Randomized placebo-controlled trial of Orlistat
severe anorexia nervosa in childhood and adolescence with behavioural weight loss therapy in obese
Ulf Wallin, Raymond Valdes (Swe) patients with and without binge eating disorder: an
orders 2011
Kindly supported by

effectiveness study in Hispanic patients with serious SHORT PAPER SESSION 4:


mental illness Follow-up/outcome
Carlos Grilo, Marney White (USA)
Chair: Beth Watkins (UK)
v. The evaluation of an eating disorders prevention
curriculum on eating attitudes and behaviours of i. Physical health eighteen years after teenage-onset
female college students anorexia nervosa
Amy Magnuson, Doris Abood (USA) Elisabet Wentz (Swe), I. Carina Gillberg (Swe),
Henrik Anckarsäter (Swe), Christopher Gillberg
SHORT PAPER SESSION 2: (Swe/UK), Maria Råstam (Swe)
Intervention/treatment B ii. Long term outcome in pre-pubertal anorexia
Chair: Walter Vandereycken (Bel) nervosa: a 10 year descriptive follow-up study
Catherine Doyen, Laura Bignami, Solange Cook-
i. Multi-family group therapy in Canada: patients Darzens, Juliane Léger, Marie-Christine Mouren (Fra)
and family self-report survey experiences in the BC
specialized provincial eating disorders programme iii. Multi-family therapy in anorexia nervosa: two
Lily Farris, Jadine Cairns, Marion Rom (Can) years follow-up
Ulf Wallin (Swe)
ii. The Maudsley collaborative carer skill building
workshop: impact on carers in an Australian sample iv. Motivation, expectations, experiences and
Genevieve Pepin (Aus), Ross King (Aus), Janet treatment satisfaction in anorexia nervosa
Treasure (UK) Gunilla Paulson-Karlsson, Lauri Nevonen (Swe)
iii. Repeated one-week admissions for patients with
v. Searching for predictors of drop-out: shifts in
longstanding eating disorders: a new cost-effective
motivation, alliance and behaviour during the early
treatment program
Øyvind Rø (Nor) weeks of treatment for anorexia nervosa
Richard Sly (UK)
iv. Mealtimes on eating disorder units: the
perspectives of staff SHORT PAPER SESSION 5:
Caroline Meyer, Stacey Long, Debbie Wallis, Jon Special interest papers
Arcelus, Newman Leung (UK)
Chair: Stephen Touyz (Aus)
v. The recovery phase in eating disorders and the i. Eating disorders in men: a review of the literature
continuity of care William Jones, John Morgan, Monique Schelhase (UK)
Silvana Fennig, Arie Hadas, Shmuel Fennig (Isr)
ii. Memory versus perception of body size in anorexia
SHORT PAPER SESSION 3: nervosa and healthy controls
Anorexia nervosa/ Maria Øverås (Nor), Hilde Kapstad (Nor), Marianne
underweight Berge Skår (Nor), Nils Inge Landrø (Nor), Bryan
Lask (UK/Nor)
Chair: Dasha Nicholls (UK)
i. Markers of bone metabolism at assessment and iii. Exercise dependence in Danish fitness cultures:
during treatment of adolescent girls with eating a study of prevalence, quality of life, psychiatric
disorders and weight loss symptoms and neurobiological factors in exercisers
Ingemar Swenne (Swe) with and without symptoms of exercise dependence
Mia Beck Lichtenstein, Niels Bilenberg, Ask Elklit,
ii. Long-term bone density in adolescents with Kirsten Kaya Roessler, Kirsten Hørder, René Klinkby
anorexia nervosa Støving (Den)
Inger Halvorsen (Nor)
iv. Autism spectrum and eating behaviour: validating
iii. Course of depression, anxiety, obsessionality and a new Swedish self-report questionnaire
social phobia symptoms in relation to malnutrition in Louise Karlsson, Maria Råstam, Elisabet Wentz (Swe)
anorexia nervosa
Lama Mattar, Nathalie Coulon, Nathalie Godart (Fra) v. Patterns of weight loss and eating habits in
morbidly obese individuals undergoing laparoscopic
iv. A case series investigating distinct gastric banding
neuropsychological profiles in children and Sue Jackson, Marianne Morris, Karen Lilley, Andrew
adolescents with anorexia nervosa Johnson (UK)
Mark Rose (UK), Ian Frampton (UK/Nor), Bryan
Lask (UK/Nor), Kristin Stedal (Nor), Beth Watkins 12.45-14.00 Lunch, poster and exhibition viewing
(UK), Jennifer Davis (UK), Maria Overas (Nor)
13.00-13.45 Eating disorders and diabetes: a new
v. The Ravello Profile: a global neuropsychological test approach to opposing illnesses
battery for eating disorders A Park Nicollet Melrose Institute
Kristin Stedal (Nor), Mark Rose (UK), Ian Frampton sponsored lecture
(UK/Nor), Nils Inge Landrø (Nor), Bryan Lask (UK/Nor)
Convenor: Joel Jahraus, MD, Executive Director
Eating Diso
14.00-15.30 CONCURRENT SESSION 3 2: Innovative approaches for complex clients: CBT
and beyond
1: Should I stay or should I go? Working with patients Victoria Mountford, Lucy Serpell (UK)
at high risk of drop-out
Richard Sly, Vicki Mountford (UK) 3: The tree of life: narrative group work to develop
connection, resilience and hope
2: “If I start, I am afraid I won’t be able to stop…” Amanda Jones, Ros Jackson, Christine Stupples (UK)
Emotion, emotion regulation and eating disorders
David Wood, Cathryn Hockridge, Mark Dumbrill (UK) 4: Letting go, keeping in touch: multi-family groups
for adults with eating disorders that aim to help
3: Cognitive interpersonal processing (CIP): parents to let go of age-inappropriate caring and find
untangling those knots that tie us up when working age-appropriate supporting
with patients with eating disorders Mildrid Valvik, Steven Balmbra (UK)
Nicky Boughton, Joel Hawkin (UK)
5: Usefulness of new-generation videogames for
4: Cognitive behaviour therapy with children and treating eating disorders: Playmancer European project
adolescents: a creative approach Fernando Fernandez (Spa), Susana Jiménez-Murcia
Beth Watkins, Pippa Hugo (UK) (Spa)
5: Beyond blame: involving parents and families in 6: From control to partnership: teenage patients,
the treatment of eating disorders parents and their psychiatrist discuss treatment
Julie Potts, Julie McCormack, Hunna Watson (Aus) Tony Jaffa, Jacky Theodore-Bake, Sarah Wingfield (UK)
6: Ecological momentary interventions for anorexia 11.00-11.30 Refreshments, poster and exhibition
nervosa: the theory, benefits and practice of a novel viewing
vodcast intervention
Janet Treasure, Carol Kan, Valentina Cardi (UK) 11.30-13.00 CONCURRENT SESSION 6
15.30-16.00 Refreshments, poster and exhibition viewing 1: Building e-communities to support recovery and
resilience: young people on the web
16.00-17.30 CONCURRENT SESSION 4 Charlotte Allinson (UK)
1: Type 1 diabetes and an eating disorder: assembling 2: Integrating the management of adolescent eating
the treatment of this complicated dual diagnosis disorders between inpatient and outpatient settings
Dawn Taylor, Marcia Meier, Stephanie Gerken (USA) Juliet Bartlett, Richard Janvier (UK)

2: MARSIPAN: Management of really sick patients 3: The invisible man: the male experience of eating
with anorexia nervosa. A practical guide disorders and implications for clinical practice
Dasha Nicholls, Paul Robinson (UK) Zach De Beer, Bernadette Wren (UK)

3: Involuntary patients or involuntary therapists: an 4: Facilitating service user and carer participation in
exploration of the ethical, legal and pragmatic issues an eating disorders service: challenges and lessons
in decision making around involuntary treatment learned in practice
Frances Wilson (Aus) Ciarán Newell, Jess Griffiths (UK)

4: “Singing from the same hymn sheet”. Lyrics for 5: Away from the clinic and off of the script: making
consistency in the therapeutic alliance better use of behavioral experiments in outpatient
Sue Simmons, John Anderson (UK) therapy
Kelly Vitousek (USA)
5: Use of atypical antipsychotics in the treatment of
eating disorders in children and adolescents: what’s 6: Where does food fit in? Integrating dietetics into
the evidence? Is there a role? What should I know? the outpatient treatment of eating disorders
Mark Norris, Wendy Spettgue, Jennifer Couturier (Can) Amanda Jones, Marilyn Conroy, Ros Jackson (UK)

6: The art and science of nursing children and 13.00-14.15 Lunch, poster and exhibition viewing
adolescents with eating disorders
Trine Wiig Hage (Nor), Lisa Lewer (UK) 14.15-15.45 PLENARY 3: Coping and
17.30-19.30 Official poster viewing and drinks
resilience
reception Chair: Stephen Wonderlich (USA)
i. Self compassion/resilience to weight control behaviours
Thursday, 31st March Josie Geller (Can)

ii. Family resilience


09.00-09.30 Registration, refreshments, poster and John Burnham (UK)
exhibition viewing
iii. Working with patients’ strengths
09.30-11.00 CONCURRENT SESSION 5 Martina de Zwaan (Ger)

1: Psycho-education: use of multi-modal approaches 15.45-16.00 CLOSING REMARKS


in children and adolescents
Anne Reeve, Sarah Cross, Vicky Moss (UK) 16.00 CLOSE OF CONFERENCE
orders 2011
Kindly supported by

The venue KINGS CROSS


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looking for green space, head north towards Regent’s
Park and London Zoo. Both are close to Camden Town,
the site of a series of lively street markets. You will have of other hotels contact Expotel on the number below,
plenty to do after an educational and stimulating day at choose the ‘hotel’ option and quote MA Healthcare/
the conference. Eating Disorders 2011.
Tel: +44 (0)845 054 8470
Email: events@expotel.com
Accommodation details
The Hilton London Euston Hotel
There are a great variety of hotels to choose from in the A 4 star hotel minutes from Euston Station and the
Bloomsbury area ranging from 5 star luxury to low cost conference venue. Address: 17-18 Upper Woburn
accommodation. Here are a few options to assist you Place, Bloomsbury, London WC1H 0HT, UK
when making a reservation. Tel: +44 (0)20 7943 4500
Grange Hotels Fax: +44 (0)20 7943 4501
Grange Hotels have 5 hotels within close Email: reservations.euston@hilton.com
proximity to the conference venue and are Lower cost accommodation Imperial
offering a special rate for delegates attending London Hotels
Eating Disorders 2011. A chain of six hotels all within walking distance of
To make a reservation please contact Grange Hotels the venue ranging from student rooms through to 3
central reservations quoting: ‘MA Healthcare’. star. In order of quality:-Imperial (3 star), President,
Tel: +44 (0)207 233 7888 Bedford, Royal National , Tavistock (students) and
Fax: +44 (0)207 630 9897 County (students)
Email: reservations@grangehotels.com Tel: +44 (0)207 2787 871/2/3 or
Email: info@imperialhotels.co.uk
Expotel Web: www.imperialhotels.co.uk
Expotel can provide a complimentary hotel booking
service for delegates attending Eating Disorders 2011.
To enquire about making a reservation or to get details
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