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Medical Emergencies in Eating Disorders (MEED)
Last updated 5th March 2024
Patients with eating disorders may feel that they do not deserve treatment, so ensure that you do not trivialise their illness by suggesting that they are not sick enough, that they do not have a low enough BMI or that they appear too well for treatment.
Risk Assessment
- Patients with eating disorders can appear well, even when they are close to death.
- Chapter 2 of this document gives the risk assessment tool for assessing impending risk to life. Anyone with one or more red rating or several amber ratings should probably be considered high risk, with a low threshold for admission.
- If there are no acute medical issues and the only red flags are in relation to mental health, consider if discussion with and admission to psychiatry would be more appropriate.
Refeeding and Other Aspects of Management
- Chapter 4 of The RC Psych College Report describes safe refeeding of malnourished patients with restrictive eating disorders, summarised in Appendix 3 and reproduced below:
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Content by Hannah Smith