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Disorders of Body Image. Edited By David J. Castle & Katharine A. Phillips. Petersfield: Wrightson Biomedical. 2002. 176 pp. £31.00 (hb). ISBN 1 87181647 5

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  02 January 2018

Helen Baxter*
Affiliation:
Nottingham Eating Disorders Service, Nottinghamshire Healthcare NHS Trust, 484 Derby Road, Nottingham NG7 2GT, UK
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Abstract

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Copyright © 2003 The Royal College of Psychiatrists 

Body image, body image dissatisfaction and body image disturbance can be elusive concepts for us to examine in our patients. Certainly when working with individuals with an eating disorder, suspicions of body image dissatisfaction are often high but it can be difficult to track down. This concise book begins by looking at the neurological basis of body image and goes on to deal with emotional responses to the self. An examination of the ways in which emotion and disgust alter one's perception of oneself is followed by a comprehensive review of socioculturally defined notions of what is and is not acceptable for body size and shape. These different strands give a broad overview of the development of body image in individuals and in cultures. The reader can then start to piece together how this process might go awry in an individual.

The authors focus on a variety of physical and psychiatric conditions in which body image is important and on the varied ways in which clients present to clinicians. The important ‘take home’ points for me from this book are how difficult body dysmorphic disorder can be to diagnose and how often clinicians miss it. Even when symptoms are florid and obvious, clinicians may not consider the diagnosis and instead identify and treat comorbid conditions such as depression. Clearly many clinicians do not routinely examine body image dissatisfaction and concerns.

There are many demands on our time and many good books that we never get time to read. This volume, however, is small, easy to dip in and out of, and draws together body image and its disorders and treatment in a comprehensive but easy-to-digest format. I would recommend it to any clinician trying to understand the body image disorders of their clients, and to clinicians who never see individuals with a disordered body image, as they may look on their patients with fresh eyes as a result.

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