What is night eating syndrome?
Night eating syndrome is an eating disorder that involves similar symptoms to both binge eating disorder and insomnia. NES is considered an “other specified eating and feeding disorder,” according to the American Psychiatric Association. The conditions in this category are related to eating disorders but do not meet enough criteria to receive another diagnosis.
People with NES may eat large amounts before bed or wake up several times throughout the night and proceed to eat large quantities of food. In fact, people with NES tend to eat a large portion of food throughout the night, with some consuming as much as 25% of their daily food intake during these episodes.2
Unlike sleep-related eating disorder (SRED), a specific type of condition that involves disordered eating behaviors while someone is not fully conscious, NES happens while someone is fully awake and aware of their actions.1 Someone can wake up with the specific intention to eat or feel that when they do wake up, they need to eat to fall back asleep.1
Like other eating and mental health disorders, night eating syndrome can have severe complications. But night eating syndrome treatment is not one-size-fits-all. The best course of care depends on several factors, including how long someone's been struggling, how severe their symptoms are, and whether they have any co-occurring medical conditions, among other considerations.
At Within, we personalize treatment to each individual case. Learn how our remote program can help you overocome night eating syndrome.
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Types of night eating syndrome treatment
How to treat night eating syndrome best depends on many factors, including the severity of someone's case. NES is typically treated on an outpatient level. However, as with all eating disorders, it can be addressed along a spectrum of care, including:3
- Inpatient treatment: Staying full-time at a treatment facility for intensive daily care
- Partial hospitalization: Treatment sessions that last for most of the day, most days a week, with patients returning home at the end of each day
- Intensive outpatient treatment: Attending treatment or therapy sessions several times a week for several hours at a time
- Outpatient treatment: Keeping up a regularly scheduled appointment with a therapist or another medical professional to check in on recovery and overall progress
While these levels of care dictate how rigorous a treatment program is, patients can participate in many different types of treatment for night eating syndrome while attending these programs.
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Types of therapy for night eating syndrome
The most common treatment for night eating syndrome is psychotherapy, which involves discussing feelings, concerns, and experiences with an analyst and learning new skills and coping mechanisms to replace unhelpful thoughts and behaviors.
Several types of night eating syndrome therapy have been shown to be effective.
Cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT)
Cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT) is the leading evidence-based therapy for many eating disorders, and it can also be used when treating night eating syndrome.
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The main concept behind cognitive behavioral therapy is that unhelpful behaviors come from unhelpful thoughts. Throughout treatment, which follows a pre-set course, a therapist will help a patient identify those troubling patterns, learn to challenge or stop them, and eventually replace them with healthier coping mechanisms.
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For example, CBT for night eating syndrome may focus on the idea, "If I don't eat, I won't be able to fall back asleep." To challenge that, patients may be asked to shift their schedules to consume most of their calories at earlier hours and use relaxation techniques and other practices, other than eating, to attempt to sleep better at night.
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CBT for night eating syndrome may also involve:
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- Keeping a food and sleep log
- Learning how to regulate meals and snacks
- Journaling about potential triggers for eating at night or thoughts when waking up
Behavior therapy
Behavior therapy is traditionally used to help treat mood disorders, including anxiety and depression, but this type of practice can also be adapted as a treatment for night eating syndrome.
Behavior therapy focuses on outside stimuli and helping patients change their reactions to these potential triggers. When used for night eating syndrome treatment, someone may be asked to:
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- Leave notes for themselves
- Lock the fridge
- Restrict access to food in other ways
When used together with talk therapy, these types of behaviors have been found effective at curbing NES symptoms.
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Progressive muscle relaxation
This technique works more toward helping someone establish healthier sleeping patterns than healthier eating patterns. Still, as many people with NES struggle with co-occurring insomnia, this can be a helpful focus.1,2
As the name suggests, progressive muscle relaxation helps patients intentionally relax different parts of their body, asking them, specifically, to release tension from different groups of muscles.2
The technique has been found to have several benefits, including alleviating anxiety and both psychological and physical stress, all of which people with night eating syndrome tend to harbor. When used as a treatment for night eating syndrome specifically, it's also shown promise for reducing extreme appetite at night and increasing appetite in the morning hours.2
Phototherapy
Similar to progressive muscle relaxation, this type of night eating syndrome therapy focuses more on establishing healthy sleep patterns.
Initially developed to help treat seasonal affective disorder, phototherapy uses different qualities of light to help regulate someone's circadian rhythm, the internal mechanism that dictates sleep schedule.2
Testing samples have been small, but phototherapy has shown effectiveness in helping people with NES get better and more sleep and curb the symptoms of eating large amounts of food at night.2
Medications to treat night eating syndrome
Pharmacotherapy, or the use of medication to help control certain disorders, has been the most-tested treatment for night eating syndrome.2
Most prominently, a class of medication called selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs) have been used to help with NES, with many cases showing these drugs to be effective.2 Doctors may also prescribe additional medications to help people with NES treat symptoms of related disorders, including depression or anxiety.
Medications are recommended on a case-by-case basis, and even throughout treatment, patients should have regular check-ins with doctors to measure dosage and progress.
It's important to note that while medications are the most-tested type of night eating syndrome treatment, they are in many cases considered supplementary treatments, with many doctors referring patients to work primarily through psychotherapy and other kinds of night eating syndrome therapy.
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Nutrition counseling and meal support
Nutrition counseling and meal support can be a particularly important treatment for night eating syndrome since the condition is centered around a specific disordered eating pattern.
Most people struggling with NES will not eat in the mornings but will wake up once or several times during the night to eat. There’s also a correlation between people struggling with night eating syndrome and people who diet because they don’t get enough food to nourish their bodies during the day.2
In these cases, nutrition counseling and meal support can help through the power of education and support.
For patients continually experimenting with diets, nutrition counseling can educate them about the damage diets do to the body and mind, why they don’t work in the long term, and why they often lead to weight gain. It can also offer new strategies to improve patients' relationships with food and their bodies.
Meal support can also help correct eating patterns, encouraging patients to eat more in the morning and throughout the day before they go to sleep.5
How to treat night eating syndrome at Within Health
Night eating syndrome may seem difficult to overcome, but help is available, and recovery is possible. The approaches above have all been found useful for treating eating disorders, including night eating syndrome.
Remote, personalized treatment
The professionals at Within Health have specialized expertise in eating disorders and tailor personalized treatment programs for each individual’s needs. Our team offers virtual care programs for eating disorders, where we can help you from your home.
If you suspect you or someone you love may need help with night eating syndrome, contact Within Health to learn more about effective treatment options.
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