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CBTTexas™ is one of the few practices in Texas to offer highly specialized, adherent, evidence-based treatment for eating disorders across the lifespan, including:
We work with children, adolescents, adults, and families, across several treatment formats. Our services include individual and family therapy (outlined below) and In-Home and Virtual Eating Disorder Intensives for adults, adolescents, and their families, who need or just prefer more immediate structure and support. (Online Groups and Classes, coming soon).
Exposure and Response Prevention (ERP)
Kids, Adolescents and Adults: All Eating Disorders, Anxiety Disorders, and OCD
Family-Based Treatment (FBT) is the most effective, research-supported treatment for adolescents with anorexia nervosa and bulimia nervosa. At CBTTexas™, we take a structured, compassionate, and laser-focused approach to FBT. Our goal is to empower parents to take the lead in their child’s recovery, while providing expert, hands-on guidance every step of the way. Families often tell us that this model finally “makes sense” of what they’ve been living with and gives them a clear path forward.
FBT is not traditional “family therapy”. Instead, it is a highly practical, action-oriented model that recognizes that adolescents with eating disorders are often unable to make healthy decisions around food and weight due to the powerful neurobiological impact of starvation and malnutrition. Because of this, parents temporarily take over the tasks that the eating disorder has hijacked, with the support and coaching of an expert clinician. FBT happens in three structured phases:
Phase 1: Restoring Health and Taking Back Control from the Eating Disorder
This is the most intensive phase of treatment. The primary goals are medical and nutritional stabilization and full interruption of eating-disorder behaviors.
Parents are guided to:
Your clinician is highly active during this phase, providing coaching, troubleshooting mealtime challenges, guiding limit-setting, monitoring weight and progress, and helping parents problem-solve as needed. This phase continues until the adolescent is medically safe, gaining weight at an appropriate rate (if indicated), and showing improved eating patterns and behavioral control.
Phase 2: Returning Responsibility to the Adolescent, Deliberately and Gradually
Once eating is more stable and the adolescent is no longer acutely medically or behaviorally compromised, the family begins the gradual transfer of eating-related responsibility back to the teen. Together, we carefully assess readiness for autonomy, ability to recognize and interrupt ED thoughts, consistency of eating patterns, and emotional and behavioral stability. Families practice slowly loosening supervision while the teen practices increasing their independent choices. The pace is individualized and based on progress, not on age or perceived maturity. Parents remain involved, but less intensely, so the adolescent proves that they can make recovery-aligned decisions. It is not uncommon for families to ebb and flow between Phase 2 and 1 as they continue to work towards successful recovery.
Phase 3: Supporting Normal Adolescent Development & Preventing Relapse
As the eating disorder recedes, therapy shifts toward rebuilding age-appropriate independence, supporting friendships, academics, hobbies, and identity development, strengthening family communication and problem-solving, and Identifying early warning signs and building a relapse-prevention plan. This phase helps the teen transition back to typical life without the eating disorder continuing to shape their decisions or identity.
Supporting a child or adolescent through Family-Based Treatment (FBT) can be overwhelming, confusing, and emotionally exhausting. Caregivers are often asked to hold firm boundaries, respond calmly to intense distress, and make high-stakes decisions in the face of fear, urgency, and uncertainty.
Eating Disorder Caregiver Peer Mentorship is designed to support parents and caregivers in navigating these challenges with greater clarity, confidence, and consistency. This offering is educational, skills-focused, and support-oriented, providing caregivers with practical guidance around how they respond to eating-disorder behaviors and recovery-related challenges at home.
Caregiver Peer Mentorship is led by Nina Jolly, who brings both professional experience within our eating disorder program as well as lived experience as a parent who has supported a child through eating-disorder treatment. This dual perspective allows her to work alongside caregivers in a grounded, pragmatic way, offering guidance that is realistic, compassionate, and closely aligned with evidence-based eating-disorder care.
Support centers on education, skill-building, and real-world problem solving, including:
Sessions are collaborative and highly practical, often focused on specific, day-to-day situations caregivers are navigating at home. Peer mentorship may be used:
This service is intended to complement, not replace, mental health treatment when such care is indicated. However, consistently, caregivers report that their time with Nina is among the most valuable supports while helping their child move toward recovery.
CBT-E is a transdiagnostic, evidence-based treatment for adults with anorexia nervosa, bulimia nervosa, and binge eating disorder.
In CBT-E, the "over-evaluation of body shape and weight" is essential to understanding patients with eating disorders. This preoccupation, and reliance on body shape and weight as a primary source of a person's sense of self-worth, value, and self-esteem forms the core pathology of these conditions.
Treatment begins with drawing out a personalized case formulation, a collaborative process that helps patients, often for the first time, understand why they have not been able to simply “will themselves” out of their eating disorder. By mapping out the maintaining mechanisms that keep their eating disorder going, patients and families can see how the disorder persists and why it can feel as though the eating disorder often seems to be "running on autopilot".
These comprehensive and personalized roadmaps allow us to provide highly tailored interventions to help patients dismantle their specific eating disorder. Patients are supported in reducing the behaviors and inaccurate assumptions that maintain their "over-evaluation of body shape and weight" while actively helping them to build a broader and more balanced sense of self, one that reflects their values, relationships, achievements, and identity beyond appearance. In doing so, CBT-E helps people begin to see themselves more as the rest of the world tends to see them: defined not by their shape or weight, but by their full worth as a person.
Treatment typically begins with twice-weekly sessions, tapering in frequency as progress is made. CBT-E is particularly well-suited for those who are ready to take an active role in recovery and who are seeking a focused, skills-based pathway to lasting change.
ERP is the most effective and well-researched treatment for conditions that involve fear and avoidance, and it plays a fundamental role in recovery from eating disorders. At its core, ERP helps patients approach stimuli that provoke anxiety, while preventing the rituals or avoidance strategies that people use to temporarily relieve their distress. At CBTTexas™, ERP is integrated into our evidence-based treatments for eating disorders, including CBT-E, FBT, and CBT-AR. When ERP is implemented effectively, it can strengthen a patient’s ability not only to eat but to do so with greater tolerance of the anxiety that often accompanies nourishment and weight restoration. ERP further helps patients challenge and disconfirm maladaptive beliefs, particularly the tendency to overestimate both the probability (how likely a feared outcome is to occur) and the cost (how intolerable or catastrophic that outcome would be) of increasing food intake and the body changes that may follow.
In many ways, our team views eating disorders as anxiety disorders. While eating disorders start for any number of reasons, typically what maintains them is significant anxiety and avoidance of feared outcomes (fear of certain foods, fear of weight and body changes, fear of losing control, and ultimately, fear of what might happen if they were to allow themselves to normalize their eating). These fears drive people to engage in all kinds of avoidance behaviors: restrictive eating, compulsive exercise, purging, constant body/weight checking or body/weight avoidance. These behaviors all contribute to patients becoming entirely preoccupied with food, their body, and their weight. While these behaviors may reduce distress in the moment, it strengthens the patient's eating disorder in the long run. ERP interrupts this cycle by creating opportunities for patients to confront their fears directly, while refraining from the safety behaviors that keep anxiety, and therefore, their eating disorder, alive. Over time, this repeated practice teaches the brain that feared situations are tolerable, that anxiety naturally subsides, and that catastrophic predictions rarely come true, allowing our patients to face their fears to find freedom from their eating disorders.
CBT-AR is a structured, time-limited, and exposure-based treatment specifically developed for avoidant/restrictive food intake disorder (ARFID). ARFID is a condition characterized by significant food restriction driven by one or more maintaining mechanisms: sensory sensitivity to taste, texture, smell, or appearance; low appetite or limited interest in eating; and/or fear of aversive consequences such as choking, vomiting, or abdominal pain. Although individuals with ARFID may not express concerns about weight or shape, the disorder can lead to nutritional deficiencies, impaired growth, dependence on supplements, and marked interference with daily functioning. CBT-AR is appropriate for children, adolescents, and adults.
CBT-AR proceeds through a clearly defined sequence of stages. Early sessions focus on psychoeducation, motivation building, and establishing a consistent pattern of eating. Treatment then moves toward identifying the individual’s maintaining mechanisms, increasing nutritional adequacy, and expanding food volume and variety through systematic and graded exposure. Exposures are conducted both in session and between sessions to help clients reduce avoidance and build confidence. To support behavioral change, CBT-AR also entails brief, targeted cognitive strategies such as updating predictions after exposures and addressing rigid or fear-based expectations about food or eating sensations. When indicated, treatment also includes structured weight-gain support to restore healthy growth and nutritional status.
Family-Based CBT-AR: Parents or caregivers take an active, central role in helping their child meet nutritional needs, try new foods, complete exposures, and reduce avoidance behaviors at home. Caregivers are coached to provide consistent structure, support, and reinforcement, positioning them as essential parts of their child's progress.
Individual CBT-AR: This format is best suited for clients who are medically stable, not underweight, and sufficiently motivated to lead their own exposure work. Treatment focuses on increasing flexibility with food, addressing sensory or fear-based drivers of restriction, and restoring a more complete and sustainable pattern of eating.
Although research on CBT-AR is still developing, early clinical trials and real-world data consistently show improvements in nutritional adequacy, food variety, weight restoration (when needed), and overall functioning. In our program, clients often experience meaningful, measurable gains as they expand their diets, reduce anxiety related to food, and re-engage more fully in daily life. CBT-AR offers a compassionate, practical roadmap for individuals and families seeking evidence-based help for ARFID.
Some people simply have too much of a good thing. Not all emotional suffering comes from a lack of self-control. For many individuals, especially those with restrictive eating disorders, distress stems from excessive self-control: perfectionism, emotional inhibition, rigid routines, and a tendency to keep feelings tightly contained. Over time, these patterns can narrow a person’s world and lead to profound emotional loneliness.
RO DBT is an evidence-based treatment designed specifically for individuals who struggle with overcontrol. It is particularly helpful for people experiencing restrictive anorexia nervosa, chronic or treatment-resistant depression, obsessive-compulsive personality disorder (OCPD), autism spectrum disorder, social anxiety, treatment resistant anxiety, or long-standing patterns of perfectionism and emotional restraint.
RO DBT is grounded in the understanding that while self-control is often valued, too much of it can interfere with flexibility, emotional openness, and the ability to form close, supportive relationships. Many individuals who benefit from RO DBT describe themselves as responsible, composed, or high achieving on the outside, yet disconnected, unseen, or misunderstood on the inside.
In treatment, clients learn to:
RO DBT focuses on openness, social signaling, and the capacity to connect with others. This approach is particularly effective for people who appear calm and capable externally but struggle internally with emotional shutdown or chronic isolation.
If you are highly self-disciplined yet still suffering, or if your eating disorder is intertwined with perfectionism, rigidity, and emotional overcontrol, RO DBT may provide a new way forward, helping you build a life marked by connection, authenticity, and ease.
Co-Director, Licensed Psychologist
Licensed Psychological Associate
CBTTexas
6575 West Loop South, Suite 603, Bellaire, Texas 77401, United States
By appointment only
Our clinicians each maintain their own direct phone Line.
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