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Moving the Needle on Eating Disorder Treatment: Precision Psychiatry and Personalized Treatment Advances

Edited by:

Cheri Levinson, PhD, University of Louisville, United States of America
April Smith, PhD, Auburn University, United States of America
Irina Alexandrovna Vanzhula, PhD, University of Louisville, United States of America
Lauren Forrest, PhD, University of Oregon, United States of America

Submission Status: Closed

This collection is no longer accepting submissions. 


Journal of Eating Disorders is calling for submissions to our Collection on Moving the Needle on Eating Disorder Treatment: Precision Psychiatry and Personalized Treatment Advances.

Image credit: © KatarzynaBialasiewicz / Getty Images / iStock

  1. Traditional eating disorder (ED) treatment approaches often use a “one-size-fits-all” method, despite the fact EDs are complex and can vary greatly from person to person. This review discusses how personalised...

    Authors: Emma Bryant, Peta Marks, Kristi Griffiths, Stephanie Boulet, Melissa Pehlivan, Sarah Barakat, Stephen Touyz and Sarah Maguire
    Citation: Journal of Eating Disorders 2025 13:63
  2. Anorexia nervosa (AN) is a severe psychiatric disorder for which effective treatment and sustained recovery are contingent upon successful weight restoration, yet the efficacy of existing treatments is subopti...

    Authors: Isabel Rodriguez, Laura M. Huckins, Cynthia M. Bulik, Jiayi Xu and Daria Igudesman
    Citation: Journal of Eating Disorders 2025 13:29

About the Collection

Eating disorders are extremely heterogeneous illnesses, meaning that regardless of diagnosis, individuals vary significantly in terms of presenting symptoms, underlying causal mechanisms, and developmental factors. This significant heterogeneity is likely one reason why treatments fail to work for almost 50% of those with an eating disorder diagnosis. Most current evidence-based treatments are nomothetic (i.e., group-level) interventions created based on general research findings that apply to a population of patients. In other words, most treatment manuals are developed based on averages and not on idiographic or individual patient-centered characteristics. Treatments based on averages are a necessary starting point for the development of evidence-based treatments because the ability to successfully reduce pathology in “average” or “common” patients can reduce a significant amount of suffering and pinpoint effective strategies. However, they do not take into account high symptom heterogeneity or treatment personalization based on individual characteristics. 
New research both inside and outside of the eating disorder field has begun to use precision psychiatry and idiographic (i.e., one person) methods to better characterize psychiatric illness and develop new data-informed evidence-based personalized treatments. Personalization of treatment is not a new idea and has been called for by major granting institutions, such as the National Institute of Mental Health (NIMH) and leaders in the field of clinical psychology and psychiatry (Fisher, 2015; Wright & Woods, 2020). Indeed, data show that tailored treatment produce longer-lasting and more effective outcomes relative to treatments based on averages (Eskildsen et al., 2020). 
The goal of this special collection is to showcase advances in precision psychiatry and personalized medicine/treatment in the eating disorders. We especially are interested in papers using idiographic methods to characterize eating disorders, new treatment developments, and explorations of how to implement precision psychiatry in practice.
This Collection welcomes submission of case reports, commentaries, original research, reviews, and study protocols.

Submission Guidelines

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This Collection welcomes submission of case reports, commentaries, original research, reviews, and study protocols. Should you wish to submit a different article type, please read our submission guidelines to confirm that type is accepted by the journal. 

Articles for this Collection should be submitted via our submission system, Snapp. Please, select the appropriate Collection title “Moving the Needle on Eating Disorder Treatment: Precision Psychiatry and Personalized Treatment Advances" under the “Details” tab during the submission stage.

Articles will undergo the journal’s standard peer-review process and are subject to all the journal’s standard policies. Articles will be added to the Collection as they are published.

The Editors have no competing interests with the submissions which they handle through the peer-review process. The peer-review of any submissions for which the Editors have competing interests is handled by another Editorial Board Member who has no competing interests.