Ready to start treatment? The Emily Program makes it easy to take the first step toward eating disorder recovery with online forms, guidance, and support.| The Emily Program
Meal plans can vary from highly detailed exchange-based plans to more general entrée-sides ones to more of an intuitive eating-based approach.| The Emily Program
How do you know when you may be exercising for the wrong reasons? The answer lies between a balance between healthy and unhealthy exercise.| The Emily Program
In this blog, we will discuss different types of purging, warning signs, physical effects, and treatment options.| The Emily Program
This article explores weight and food bias, including perpetuating factors, consequences, and recommendations for promoting weight inclusivity.| The Emily Program
Chief Medical Officer, Mark Warren, discusses the role of exercise, obsessive exercise, and compensatory exercise, in eating disorders and recovery.| The Emily Program
Learn about how The Emily Program employs a multidisciplinary team of eating disorder specialists to deliver the best care to every client.| The Emily Program
Learn how the diet industry has reworked its language to disguise diets as being about “health” and “wellness."| The Emily Program
Exercise in eating disorder recovery is a hotly disputed topic. What type of activity is positive? Is there a place for intense exercise in recovery?| The Emily Program
From dieting to excessive exercise, it can be tricky to understand when disordered behaviors spiral into an eating disorder.| The Emily Program
Eating disorders are complex illnesses that require a specialized treatment team. Learn more about what to expect from an ED treatment team.| National Alliance for Eating Disorders
Visit our site to learn more about the Bulimia Nervosa eating disorder, its causes, symptoms and ways to get support or find treatment for a full recovery.| National Alliance for Eating Disorders
Visit our website to learn more about the different types of eating disorders, their warning signs, symptoms and how to seek help or treatment.| National Alliance for Eating Disorders