Guides eating disorder assessment with medical stability criteria and treatment level determination. Use when evaluating eating disorders, assessing medical stability, or determining treatment level.
Guides eating disorder assessment with medical stability criteria, APA Practice Guidelines for Treatment of Eating Disorders, and level-of-care determination using APA and AACAP placement criteria.
Eating disorders have the highest mortality rate of any psychiatric illness, with anorexia nervosa carrying a standardized mortality ratio of 5.86 — six times the expected death rate. Medical complications including cardiac arrhythmias, electrolyte derangements, refeeding syndrome, and organ failure require coordinated psychiatric-medical management. The APA Practice Guidelines for the Treatment of Patients with Eating Disorders (Third Edition) establish evidence-based standards for assessment, medical stabilization, nutritional rehabilitation, psychotherapy, and pharmacotherapy.
Underrecognition remains a critical problem — average time from symptom onset to treatment is 5-7 years. Males, older adults, ethnic minorities, and individuals with atypical presentations (normal or higher weight) are systematically underdiagnosed. Level-of-care decisions must integrate psychiatric severity, medical instability, and nutritional status using validated criteria, not clinical impression alone.
Anorexia Nervosa (F50.0x):
Bulimia Nervosa (F50.2):
Binge Eating Disorder (F50.81):
Avoidant/Restrictive Food Intake Disorder (ARFID, F50.82):
Assess for medical emergencies requiring immediate stabilization:
Criteria for Medical Hospitalization (APA/AACAP):
Refeeding Syndrome Risk Assessment: Refeeding syndrome is the most dangerous medical complication of nutritional rehabilitation and can be fatal. High-risk patients include:
Monitor: Phosphate, potassium, magnesium, calcium daily during first 7-10 days of refeeding. Start caloric intake conservatively (1,200-1,500 kcal/day in severe cases) and advance slowly with electrolyte supplementation.
Inpatient Medical: Medical instability meeting any criteria above. Primary focus: medical stabilization, electrolyte correction, cardiac monitoring, refeeding initiation.
Inpatient Psychiatric: Medically stable but: suicidal ideation with plan/intent, severe malnutrition requiring structured refeeding, failure of lower levels of care, inability to maintain nutritional intake in less structured settings, severe co-occurring psychiatric symptoms.
Residential Treatment: Medically stable, BMI typically ≥15, able to participate in programming, requires 24-hour structure for meals and symptom management, failure of PHP/IOP.
Partial Hospitalization (PHP): Medically stable, BMI typically >16, can be safe overnight, needs structured eating during the day (typically 3 meals + 2-3 snacks supervised).
Intensive Outpatient (IOP): Medically stable, weight restoration progressing, needs support but can manage most meals independently.
Outpatient: Medically stable, weight stable or progressing, can manage meals with minimal professional support, working on relapse prevention and body image issues.
Nutritional Rehabilitation:
Psychotherapy (Evidence-Based):
Pharmacotherapy: