Eating Disorders Treatment

Expert psychiatric care for eating disorders via telepsychiatry across California.

Understanding Eating Disorders

Eating disorders are serious, potentially life-threatening mental health conditions that involve significant disturbances in eating behaviors, body image, and the thoughts and emotions surrounding food and weight. They are not lifestyle choices, phases, or signs of vanity — they are complex psychiatric conditions with real biological, psychological, and social underpinnings that require professional treatment.

At PsychBright Health, our board-certified psychiatrists specialize in eating disorder diagnosis and treatment. We take a compassionate, whole-person approach — understanding that recovery from an eating disorder requires addressing both the psychiatric and medical dimensions of the condition. Whether you are in Los Angeles or anywhere else in California, we are here to help.

What Are Eating Disorders?

Eating disorders are characterized by persistent disturbances in eating behavior and related thoughts and emotions that significantly impair physical health, psychological functioning, or both. They are among the most medically serious psychiatric conditions — and also among the most treatable with the right care.

Eating disorders affect people of all genders, ages, body sizes, and backgrounds. The stereotype of who develops an eating disorder is far narrower than reality — and this misconception frequently delays diagnosis and treatment.

Types of Eating Disorders We Treat

Our psychiatrists are experienced in evaluating and treating all major eating disorders, including:

Anorexia Nervosa
Characterized by restriction of energy intake leading to significantly low body weight, intense fear of weight gain, and distorted body image. Anorexia has the highest mortality rate of any psychiatric disorder and requires prompt, comprehensive treatment. Two subtypes exist — restricting type and binge-eating/purging type.

Bulimia Nervosa
Characterized by recurrent episodes of binge eating followed by compensatory behaviors such as self-induced vomiting, laxative use, fasting, or excessive exercise. Bulimia involves a sense of loss of control during binge episodes and is associated with intense shame, secrecy, and significant physical health consequences.

Binge Eating Disorder (BED)
The most prevalent eating disorder — characterized by recurrent episodes of eating large amounts of food in a short period with a sense of loss of control, without regular compensatory behaviors. BED is associated with significant distress, guilt, and a range of physical health consequences.

Avoidant/Restrictive Food Intake Disorder (ARFID)
A pattern of extremely limited food intake not driven by body image concerns, but rather by sensory sensitivities, fear of choking or vomiting, or apparent lack of interest in food. ARFID can lead to significant nutritional deficiencies and functional impairment.

Other Specified Feeding or Eating Disorders (OSFED)
Clinically significant eating disorder presentations that do not meet full criteria for the above diagnoses but cause significant distress and impairment. OSFED is common and deserves the same level of clinical attention as other eating disorders.

Orthorexia
An obsessive focus on “healthy” or “clean” eating that becomes so extreme it causes nutritional deficiencies, impairs social functioning, and causes significant distress — despite not being formally classified in the DSM-5.

Recognizing the Symptoms

Eating disorders are often hidden and easy to miss — particularly in individuals who do not fit the stereotypical image of someone with an eating disorder. Signs that warrant a psychiatric evaluation include:

  • Persistent restriction of food intake or rigid food rules
  • Recurrent episodes of binge eating — eating large amounts rapidly with a sense of loss of control
  • Compensatory behaviors such as purging, laxative use, excessive exercise, or fasting
  • Intense preoccupation with food, calories, weight, or body shape
  • Significant distortion in how one perceives their own body
  • Intense fear of weight gain, even at a low body weight
  • Eating in secret or hiding food
  • Significant distress around mealtimes or social eating situations
  • Physical signs such as dizziness, fatigue, hair loss, dental erosion, or frequent illness
  • Withdrawal from social activities involving food
  • Significant changes in weight — either loss or gain
  • Mood disturbances — depression, anxiety, or irritability — closely tied to eating behaviors

 

If you or someone you know is experiencing symptoms of an eating disorder, please seek professional help promptly. Early intervention significantly improves outcomes.

How Eating Disorders Are Diagnosed

Eating disorders are diagnosed through a comprehensive psychiatric evaluation that reviews eating behaviors, body image, weight history, physical health, and co-occurring mental health conditions. A psychiatrist assesses symptom patterns against diagnostic criteria from the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM-5) to identify the specific disorder present.

Medical evaluation is also an important component of eating disorder assessment, as these conditions can cause serious physical health consequences — including electrolyte imbalances, cardiac arrhythmias, bone density loss, and hormonal disruption — that require monitoring and treatment alongside the psychiatric condition.

Co-occurring psychiatric conditions — including depression, anxiety, OCD, PTSD, and personality disorders — are extremely common in people with eating disorders and must be identified and treated as part of a comprehensive plan.

What Causes Eating Disorders?

Eating disorders are complex conditions with multiple contributing factors. No single cause explains their development — they arise from the interaction of biological vulnerabilities, psychological factors, and social and cultural influences.

  • Genetics — Eating disorders run in families. Genetic factors contribute to temperament traits such as perfectionism, anxiety sensitivity, and harm avoidance that increase vulnerability.
  • Brain chemistry — Dysregulation in serotonin, dopamine, and other neurotransmitter systems plays a role in eating disorder development and maintenance.
  • Psychological factors — Low self-esteem, perfectionism, difficulty tolerating negative emotions, and history of trauma are strongly associated with eating disorder development.
  • Trauma and adverse experiences — Physical, emotional, or sexual abuse and other adverse childhood experiences significantly increase eating disorder risk.
  • Cultural and social pressures — Societal idealization of thinness, diet culture, and social media exposure to idealized body images contribute to body dissatisfaction and disordered eating.
  • Co-occurring psychiatric conditions — Depression, anxiety, OCD, and ADHD frequently co-occur with eating disorders and can drive eating disorder behaviors as a form of coping or control.

When to See a Psychiatrist for an Eating Disorder

Eating disorders are frequently hidden — both from others and from the person experiencing them. Many people minimize their symptoms or delay seeking help due to shame, fear of being told to gain weight, or uncertainty about whether their experiences “count.” All eating disorders deserve professional attention. You should consider speaking with a psychiatrist if:

  • Your relationship with food, eating, or your body is causing significant distress
  • Eating behaviors are interfering with your social life, work, or daily functioning
  • You engage in binge eating, purging, restriction, or excessive compensatory exercise
  • You have intense fear of weight gain or a distorted perception of your body
  • You are experiencing physical symptoms that may be related to eating behaviors
  • Depression, anxiety, or obsessive thoughts are closely tied to food or body image
  • Someone close to you has expressed concern about your eating behaviors
  • You have a history of an eating disorder and feel at risk of relapse

If any of these resonate with you, a psychiatric evaluation is an important next step.

Our Approach to Eating Disorder Treatment

At PsychBright Health, we take a comprehensive, compassionate approach to eating disorder treatment. We understand that recovery is complex and non-linear — and that the relationship between a patient and their treatment team is foundational to progress. Our psychiatrists address both the eating disorder and any co-occurring psychiatric conditions, working in coordination with therapists, dietitians, and medical providers as part of a multidisciplinary care team.

How We Treat Eating Disorders

Comprehensive Psychiatric Evaluation

Every patient begins with a thorough psychiatric evaluation to accurately diagnose the eating disorder, identify co-occurring conditions, assess medical risk, and understand the patient’s history, patterns, and treatment goals. This evaluation forms the foundation of an individualized treatment plan.

Medication Management

Medication plays an important role in eating disorder treatment — particularly in addressing co-occurring psychiatric conditions that drive or maintain eating disorder behaviors. Our psychiatrists carefully prescribe and monitor:

  • SSRIs — fluoxetine is FDA-approved for bulimia nervosa and is also used for binge eating disorder and anxiety and depression co-occurring with eating disorders.
  • SNRIs and other antidepressants — used for co-occurring depression and anxiety that frequently accompany eating disorders.
  • Lisdexamfetamine (Vyvanse) — FDA-approved for moderate to severe binge eating disorder.
  • Anti-anxiety medications — used carefully when anxiety is a significant driver of eating disorder behaviors.
  • Mood stabilizers or atypical antipsychotics — in select cases, particularly when significant cognitive rigidity, obsessive thinking, or co-occurring mood disorders are present.

Learn more about our Psychiatric Medication Management.

Therapy Coordination

Psychotherapy is central to eating disorder recovery. The most evidence-based approaches include:

  • Cognitive Behavioral Therapy for Eating Disorders (CBT-E) — addresses the thoughts, beliefs, and behaviors that maintain the eating disorder.
  • Dialectical Behavior Therapy (DBT) — particularly useful when emotional dysregulation, impulsivity, or self-harm behaviors are present alongside the eating disorder.
  • Family-Based Treatment (FBT) — the gold-standard approach for adolescents with anorexia nervosa, involving the family as a central part of the recovery process.
  • Acceptance and Commitment Therapy (ACT) — helps patients develop a healthier relationship with difficult thoughts and feelings about food and body image.

We work collaboratively with your existing therapist if you have one, or can refer you to a therapist experienced in eating disorder treatment across California.

Many patients with eating disorders also experience depression, anxiety, or PTSD. Learn more about our Depression Treatment, Anxiety Treatment, and PTSD Treatment.

Multidisciplinary Care Coordination

Eating disorder recovery typically requires a team approach. We coordinate with dietitians, therapists, and primary care or internal medicine providers to ensure that both the psychiatric and medical dimensions of the eating disorder are addressed comprehensively.

Lifestyle and Holistic Support

Recovery from an eating disorder involves rebuilding a healthy, sustainable relationship with food, movement, and the body. We incorporate guidance on mindful eating practices, appropriate exercise relationships, stress management, and self-compassion as part of a holistic treatment approach.

Ongoing Monitoring and Follow-Up

Eating disorder recovery is a long-term process that requires consistent support. We provide regular follow-up appointments — in-person or via Telepsychiatry — to monitor progress, adjust medications, address setbacks with compassion, and provide continuous support throughout recovery.

Eating Disorder Psychiatrist Across California

We offer secure, HIPAA-compliant video appointments for patients throughout California. Telepsychiatry removes geographic barriers to specialized eating disorder psychiatric care — making it possible to access expert treatment regardless of where you are in the state.

Related Conditions We Also Treat

  • Depression — one of the most common co-occurring conditions with eating disorders
  • Anxiety Disorders — anxiety frequently drives restrictive and compensatory behaviors
  • OCD — obsessive thoughts about food and body image share features with OCD and often co-occur
  • PTSD — trauma history is closely associated with eating disorder development
  • Personality Disorders — particularly BPD, which frequently co-occurs with bulimia and binge eating disorder
  • ADHD — impulsivity associated with ADHD can contribute to binge eating behaviors

Why Choose PsychBright Health for Eating Disorder Treatment?

  • Board-certified psychiatrists experienced in eating disorder diagnosis and treatment
  • Compassionate, non-judgmental care that meets patients where they are in their recovery journey
  • Integrated treatment addressing eating disorders alongside co-occurring psychiatric conditions
  • Multidisciplinary coordination with therapists, dietitians, and medical providers
  • Most major insurance plans accepted
  • Same-week appointments available
  • Telepsychiatry across California

How Eating Disorder Treatment Improves Quality of Life

Recovery from an eating disorder opens the door to a life no longer governed by food rules, body obsession, or the secrecy and shame that eating disorders create. Patients who engage in treatment report improvements in physical health, energy, concentration, emotional stability, and the ability to participate fully in relationships and daily life. Social meals become possible again. The mental space consumed by food and body thoughts becomes available for the things that actually matter.

Recovery is not a straight line — but it is absolutely possible. Many people who once felt entirely controlled by their eating disorder go on to build full, nourishing lives in recovery.

Frequently Asked Questions

Do eating disorders only affect young women?

No. Eating disorders affect people of all genders, ages, body sizes, ethnicities, and socioeconomic backgrounds. Men, older adults, and people in larger bodies are frequently underdiagnosed because they do not fit the stereotypical image of someone with an eating disorder. Any person experiencing disordered eating behaviors deserves professional evaluation and care.

How are eating disorders diagnosed?

Eating disorders are diagnosed through a comprehensive psychiatric evaluation reviewing eating behaviors, body image, weight history, physical health, and co-occurring mental health conditions. DSM-5 criteria are used to identify the specific disorder. Medical evaluation is also important given the physical health consequences of eating disorders.

Can eating disorders be treated without hospitalization?

Many eating disorders can be effectively treated in outpatient settings — particularly when the condition is identified early and medical stability is maintained. More severe cases, particularly anorexia nervosa with significant medical compromise, may require a higher level of care such as residential or inpatient treatment. Our psychiatrists assess each patient’s level of medical and psychiatric risk and help determine the appropriate level of care.

What medications are used to treat eating disorders?

Fluoxetine (Prozac) is FDA-approved for bulimia nervosa. Lisdexamfetamine (Vyvanse) is FDA-approved for binge eating disorder. Other medications — including SSRIs, SNRIs, and mood stabilizers — are often used to treat co-occurring depression, anxiety, and OCD that accompany eating disorders. Medication is most effective as part of a comprehensive treatment plan that includes psychotherapy.

Is recovery from an eating disorder possible?

Yes. Full recovery from an eating disorder is absolutely possible, particularly with early intervention and comprehensive treatment. Research shows that the majority of people who receive appropriate treatment achieve significant improvement or full remission. Recovery takes time and commitment — but it is one of the most worthwhile journeys a person can undertake.

Do you offer telepsychiatry for eating disorder treatment?

Yes. We offer secure, HIPAA-compliant video appointments for patients across California for eating disorder evaluation, medication management, and follow-up appointments.

Do you accept insurance?

Yes. PsychBright Health accepts most major insurance plans. Call (213) 584-2331 to confirm your coverage before your first appointment.

How quickly can I get an appointment?

We typically offer same-week appointments. Call (213) 584-2331 or submit a request online and our team will follow up within one business day.

Get Help for an Eating Disorder Today

You do not have to keep struggling alone. Our experienced psychiatric team is ready to provide a compassionate evaluation, an accurate diagnosis, and a treatment plan built around your specific needs and recovery goals.

Schedule an appointment with a board-certified psychiatrist at PsychBright Health today. Telepsychiatry appointments are available across California.

Call (213) 584-2331 or submit an appointment request online.

1180 S Beverly Dr #700, Los Angeles, CA 90035 · Monday–Friday, 8:00 AM–5:00 PM

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