Review
------
"This book is essential reading for any parent or family member of a teen with an eating disorder. It's
especially useful for those who have been told to 'not be the food ' or that they have no role in helping support
a loved one with an eating disorder. It offers practical advice for how to help, along with something just as important:
hope."--Harriet Brown, author of Brave Girl Eating: A Family's Struggle with Anorexia
"Parents facing their son or daughter's eating disorder are caught in a stormy night of fear and confusion. This second
edition is a welcome lighthouse. Like the authors' family-based model, the book empowers parents with the
information and direction needed to ride out the storm and find safety. I recommend this book to parents, clinicians,
and advocates."--Laura Collins Lyster-Mensh, MS, founder of Families Empowered and Supporting of Eating
Disorders (F.E.A.S.T.)
"From two renowned clinician-researchers, this book offers plenty of useful information. Throughout, vignettes offer
clear-cut advice on how to respond to the many issues parents encounter before, during, and after . This book
is suitable for anyone who wants to learn more about the impact of eating disorders on families, and how to help."--W.
Stewart Agras, MD, Department of Psychiatry, Stanford University
"Eating disorders can creep into your family life and take you by surprise. This book, written by two of the foremost
clinicians in the field, illustrates the multifaceted nature of the problem and allows you to expand your resources
based on their wisdom."--Janet Treasure, PhD, FRCP, FRCPsych, Director, Eating Disorders Research Unit, Kings College
London, United Kingdom
"In the fall of 2005 our daughter was confined to a hospital bed. Her doctor recommended Help Your Teenager Beat an
Eating Disorder. I recognized my daughter's anorexic behaviors in the very first paragraph of Chapter 1, but didn't
realize then how invaluable the book would be in the months to follow. This book has been one oasis of sanity that I've
revisited many times, and each time I've found hope and help. I'll continue to recommend it as required reading for any
parent who's fighting for their child's life."--Ann, member of www.maudsleyparents.org
"The second edition has been fully updated to incorporate current diagnostic classifications for feeding and eating
disorders and the latest research evidence. Lock and Le Grange use their wealth of academic expertise and clinical
wisdom to offer parents empathy, understanding, and practical advice. Written in accessible language, the book is filled
with realistic scenarios ed at affirming and mobilizing parents to take action. Lock and Le Grange address many of
the pervasive myths about eating disorders, assuage guilt, and offer hope to parents in the frightening early stages of
the illness. Highly recommended."--Dasha Nicholls, MBBS, MD, Feeding and Eating Disorders Service, Great Ormond Street
Hospital and Institute of Child , London, United Kingdom
About the Author
----------------
James Lock, MD, PhD, is Professor of Child Psychiatry and Pediatrics at Stanford University and Director of the Stanford
Child and Adolescent Eating Disorders Program. Dr. Lock has received numerous awards for his research on eating
disorders and has published several books for professionals in collaboration with Daniel Le Grange. He is committed to
providing evidence-based s to children, adolescents, and their families.
Daniel Le Grange, PhD, is the Benioff UCSF Professor in Children’s in the Departments of Psychiatry and
Pediatrics and Joint Director of the Eating Disorders Program at the University of California, San Francisco. He is
Emeritus Professor at the University of Chicago, where he was Director of the Eating Disorders Program until 2014. An
award-winning researcher, Dr. Le Grange was a member of the team at the Maudsley Hospital in London that developed
family-based for anorexia nervosa. Over his career, he has treated numerous adolescents and families
struggling with eating disorders.