What is Family Based Treatment?

The 3 Phases of FBT

In the initial phase of FBT, the sole focus is on physical stabilization and nutrition. Because starvation affects the brain’s ability to think rationally, the adolescent is temporarily relieved of the burden of making decisions about food. Parents take full charge of meal planning, preparation, and supervision.

  • Reversing Malnutrition: Prioritizing weight restoration and physical healing above all else.
  • Full Parental Supervision: Parents or caregivers support and monitor the individual at every meal and snack.
  • Stopping Compensatory Behaviors: Actively preventing purging, excessive exercise, or fluid loading.
  • Therapist Coaching: The FBT therapist works closely with parents to provide strategies for managing mealtime resistance and distress.
  • A Unified Front: Ensuring all caregivers are aligned and consistent in their expectations.

Once the adolescent has reached a stable, healthy weight and mealtime conflict has significantly decreased, the transition to Phase 2 begins. Control over eating is gradually and safely handed back to the young person.

  • Step-by-Step Autonomy: Slowly reintroducing choices, such as letting the adolescent serve their own portions or pack their own lunch.
  • Vigilant Monitoring: Parents step back into a supportive, watchful role rather than direct control, closely monitoring for signs of relapse.
  • Addressing Food Flexibility: Helping the adolescent navigate social eating, such as dining with friends or attending school events.
  • Managing Residual Thoughts: Continuing to challenge remaining eating disorder thoughts while reinforcing healthy eating habits.
  • Ongoing Team Collaboration: Regular check-ins with the therapist to evaluate readiness for further independence.

The final phase begins when the adolescent can maintain a healthy weight independently and eating disorder behaviors have ceased. The focus shifts away from food and toward supporting normal, age-appropriate development.

  • Establishing a Healthy Identity: Helping the adolescent develop a sense of self that is completely separate from the eating disorder.
  • Navigating Adolescent Milestones: Focusing on peer relationships, academic goals, and increased personal independence.
  • Healthy Coping Mechanisms: Teaching alternative ways to handle stress, anxiety, or emotional distress without turning to food manipulation.
  • Relapse Prevention Planning: Creating a concrete family plan to recognize early warning signs and intervene quickly if needed.
  • Gradual Tapering of Therapy: Decreasing the frequency of therapy sessions as the family system stabilizes into long-term wellness.
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Family-Based Treatment is a highly structured, intensive outpatient therapy that requires dedication, but its success rates are unmatched for adolescent eating disorder recovery. A comprehensive FBT plan brings together a multidisciplinary team—typically including an FBT-trained therapist, a pediatrician or medical doctor to monitor physical vitals, and sometimes a specialized dietitian. By keeping the adolescent at home and surrounded by loved ones, FBT allows recovery to happen in the child’s natural environment, leading to stronger, more sustainable outcomes.

Eating disorders are life-threatening conditions, but lasting recovery is achievable. Clinical research consistently shows that early intervention utilizing Family-Based Treatment yields the highest rates of long-term recovery for teens. If you believe your child is struggling, reaching out for specialized support early is the most critical step you can take.