2011RACGP进食障碍的早期识别指南
• General practitioners have an important opportunity to recognise eating disorders early in their course.
• Severe dieting and subclinical eating disorders also cause significant
morbidity if untreated.
• Involving families in the treatment process is essential for better
outcomes; family based therapy has the strongest evidence base for
treatment in this age group.
• The prognosis of eating disorders in adolescence ma
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The Royal Australian College of General Practitioners (RACGP) is Australia’s largest professional general practice organisation and represents urban and rural general practitioners. We represent over 20 000 members working in or towards a career in general practice and are proud that in the 2010–2011 financial year over 18 000 GPs in Australia chose to be a member of the College. The College’s mission is to improve the health and wellbeing of all people in Australia by supporting GPs, general practice registrars and medical students through its principal activities of education, training and research and by assessing doctors’ skills and knowledge, supplying ongoing professional development activities, developing resources and guidelines, helping GPs with issues that affect their practice, and developing standards that general practices use to ensure high quality healthcare.