Yes. Our relationship with food is very important! Because of the societies conditioning on what beauty is, many people literally sacrifice their health in order to feel more beautiful. And others in the other hand just can not stop eating for various reasons. So yes, NLP can even help people overcome eating disorders.
Answer: My clients include men and women of all ages, from 25 to 73 years of age. I work with people who have diabetes, heart disease, osteoporosis, lupus and other autoimmune diseases, eating disorders, pre-post natal, pre-post bariatric surgery and all typ...
Answer: Providing eating disorder treatment requires extensive training in the field, from both the clinical and research sides. Training for specialists involves clinical work in inpatient and outpatient eating disorder treatment settings; presenting and pu...
Answer: Anyone can be affected. Eating disorders do not discriminate on the basis of sex, age or race. They can be found in both sexes, all age groups, and across a wide variety of races and ethnic backgrounds. However, there are groups who display an increa...
Answer: Yes. Kahi Mohala has recently seen an increase in patients with eating disorders. We are successfully treating these patients through education, proper nutrition and re-feeding treatment plans. Our treatment team can help you or your loved one get ba...
Answer: Magnolia Creek specializes in treating eating disorders, and we only admit clients who have an eating disorder (anorexia, bulimia, binge eating disorder or EDNOS) as their primary diagnosis. However, our program is designed to also treat secondary, c...
Answer: I work with teenagers, young people, women and men who are experiencing all types of mental health concerns including depression, anxiety, grief, low self esteem and eating disorders. I also counsel people who are experiencing interperso...
Answer: Most of us lead very busy lives so it is easy for self-care to take a back seat. Particularly when it comes to emotional self-care, it is not uncommon for people to think that they have "got it under control" when they actually do not...