Bulimia Nervosa:
Understanding Bulimia
and How It Is Best Treated
Understanding Bulimia
Bulimia nervosa can take hold in ways that are often hidden.
What may begin as an attempt to manage weight or feel more in control can gradually become a cycle that feels difficult to interrupt. Periods of overeating are often followed by efforts to “undo” the impact through behaviors like purging, restricting, or over-exercising. Over time, this cycle can feel both urgent and exhausting.
Many people struggling with bulimia describe a sense of secrecy or loss of control. Eating may feel chaotic or disconnected, and guilt or shame can become part of the pattern. Relationships, mood, and self-image are often affected, even when things appear “fine” from the outside.
Over time, bulimia can impact physical health, emotional well-being, and a person’s sense of stability and self. It is a serious condition, but it is also highly treatable with the right approach.
What Is Bulimia?
Bulimia nervosa is an eating disorder characterized by recurrent episodes of binge eating followed by compensatory behaviors such as vomiting, restricting, fasting, or excessive exercise.
It is not simply about willpower or appearance. Bulimia is driven by a complex mix of biological vulnerability, emotional regulation challenges, and learned patterns around food and coping. It can affect people across a wide range of body types, ages, and backgrounds.
Without treatment, the cycle tends to become more ingrained over time. With effective care, recovery is absolutely possible.
Treatment for bulimia is not one size fits all.
Our approach is shaped by age, stage of development, and how the disorder is presenting, including frequency of symptoms, medical considerations, co-occurring conditions, and the patterns that may be maintaining the cycle.
We tailor treatment for adolescents and adults, using evidence-based approaches that address both the behaviors and the underlying drivers of the disorder.
Columbus Park’s Approach to Treatment for Bulimia
Bulimia Treatment for Adults
For adults, treatment is typically grounded in Enhanced Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT-E), a structured and highly effective approach for bulimia.
CBT-E focuses on interrupting the binge-purge cycle by helping individuals establish more consistent eating patterns, reduce compensatory behaviors, and address the thinking styles that maintain the disorder, including rigid rules around food and the overvaluation of weight and shape.
At the same time, we recognize that bulimia in adults is often linked to broader emotional and psychological factors. We integrate additional approaches as needed, including work on emotion regulation, trauma, and patterns related to shame, impulsivity, or stress.
Bulimia Treatment for Adolescents
For adolescents, treatment often includes strong family involvement alongside individual work.
While Family Based Treatment (FBT) is more central in anorexia, for bulimia we help parents take a supportive and structured role in reducing binge and purge behaviors, increasing consistency with meals, and creating a home environment that supports recovery.
We work closely with both the teen and their caregivers to reduce secrecy, build accountability, and restore a more stable relationship with food. As symptoms improve, we support increasing independence in a developmentally appropriate way.
Co-occurring concerns such as anxiety, depression, or impulsivity are also addressed as treatment progresses.
Many people struggling with bulimia are also dealing with anxiety, depression, OCD, or trauma. We take these into account while maintaining a clear initial focus on stabilizing eating patterns and reducing binge-purge behaviors. As treatment progresses, these areas are addressed in an integrated and manageable way.
Some individuals require a more tailored approach due to added complexity, such as high impulsivity, emotional dysregulation, or entrenched behavioral cycles. In these cases, we draw from multiple evidence-based approaches to create a treatment plan that remains both structured and flexible, while maintaining a clear focus on recovery.
Want to know the key to overcoming binge-eating and purging?
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A few articles to get you started.
Feel free to explore more on our blog →
Understanding Bulimia Nervosa: Causes, Patterns and Effective Treatment
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The Silent Cycle of Bulimia Nervosa: How Shame Perpetuates the Illness
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