Crisis support: 116 117 (Mental Helse (24/7)) Medical emergency: 113
Professional ยท Safe ยท Confidential
LumaCare Mentalhelse โ€” Oslo ยท NORGE
EATING DISORDERS

Eating Disorders and Binge Eating

Binge Eating Disorder (BED) is frequently intertwined with deeply rooted emotional and relational patterns, alongside core challenges in emotional regulation.

Calm and safe atmosphere

Overview

Binge Eating Disorder (BED) is frequently intertwined with deeply rooted emotional and relational patterns, alongside core challenges in emotional regulation.

Services Provided

  • I offer targeted therapeutic treatment and clinical support for individuals experiencing challenges related to binge eating and emotional overeating.
  • We work together to explore and address the underlying emotional triggers, decouple food consumption from stress and emotional regulation, and establish healthier coping mechanisms to dismantle maladaptive behavioral cycles.

How it works

  1. 01

    Assessment

    We map eating episodes, emotions, triggers, physical factors, and risk.

  2. 02

    Emotion regulation

    We work on other ways to meet stress and difficult emotions.

Our approach

The aim is not shame or control, but understanding, regulation, and safer coping.

Services Exclusions:

To ensure patient safety and maintain appropriate clinical boundaries within my practice, I do not accept patients diagnosed with Anorexia Nervosa or advanced or severe Bulimia Nervosa. These are highly complex and potentially life-threatening conditions associated with significant medical and somatic risks, including severe emaciation, electrolyte imbalances, and cardiovascular complications. Managing these conditions necessitates a multidisciplinary team comprising a physician, a psychologist, and frequently a clinical nutritionist, alongside continuous somatic monitoring via regular medical metrics such as blood tests, weight monitoring, ECGs, and emergency medical availability. If these conditions are suspected, a clinical referral must be made through a general practitioner to specialist health services such as a DPS or BUP, or dedicated specialized eating disorder units.

Frequently asked

Which Conditions Fall Outside My Scope of Practice?

My private practice operates strictly on a scheduled, daytime outpatient basis and lacks the comprehensive multidisciplinary support network and round-the-clock emergency infrastructure found within a hospital setting. To prevent inappropriate referrals and ensure realistic expectations, it is crucial to clarify which conditions fall outside the clinical scope of my private services.

Regrettably, I am unable to accept patients presenting with the following challenges:

  • Active Moderate to Severe Substance Use Disorders (Addiction): These conditions require specialized multidisciplinary addiction treatment (TSB). However, patients with a historical background of substance abuse who are currently stable and sober, and who require treatment for underlying psychiatric conditions such as ADHD or affective disorders, are warmly welcome in my practice.
  • Acute Psychosis and Unmanaged Schizophrenic States: These clinical presentations require immediate emergency intervention, continuous monitoring by mobile crisis teams (AAT/FACT), or acute admission to an inpatient psychiatric ward to guarantee the safety of the patient and their surroundings. A private outpatient clinic relies on scheduled sessions and lacks the emergency infrastructure needed to manage a severe break from reality. I can, however, provide continuing care for patients with schizophrenia or bipolar disorders who are already established on medical treatment and are in a stable, maintenance phase.
  • Acute Crises, Severe Suicidal Ideation, or Intense Self-Harm Impulses: These presentations require 24-hour clinical observation and a highly dense safety network. Such individuals must be managed within public acute psychiatric services. In the event of immediate suicidal danger, emergency medical services (Legevakt: 116 117) or your local acute psychiatric unit must be contacted immediately.
  • Severe Anorexia Nervosa or Bulimia Nervosa: Conditions involving critical somatic complications and medical instability, such as an exceptionally low BMI, cardiac arrhythmias, or severe electrolyte imbalances, require integrated multidisciplinary care involving clinical nutritionists, internists, and frequently inpatient hospitalization. As a solo private practitioner, I do not possess the infrastructure to bear this medical and somatic responsibility alone.
  • Profound Intellectual Disabilities (F70โ€“F79) with Severe Behavioral Disturbances: These patients generally require heavily coordinated services from the municipality, social services (NAV), specialized housing, and institutional habilitation services. Private outpatient practice is best suited for individuals who possess the cognitive capacity necessary to actively participate in and benefit from outpatient psychotherapy and standard medication monitoring.
  • Coercive Care and Forensic Psychiatry: All forms of involuntary treatment (compulsory mental health care) and the clinical follow-up of legally sentenced patients require formal statutory frameworks and institutional settings that belong exclusively to the public healthcare system.

Emergency Services:

This clinic does not provide emergency psychiatric assistance, offering only scheduled diagnostic evaluations and treatment during standard daytime hours.

If you require immediate, acute assistance, please contact:

  • Acute Mobile Crisis Team (AAT): Contact the mobile team under the DPS or outpatient clinic at your local hospital during daytime hours.
  • Emergency Medical Services (Legevakt): Call the national emergency medical number at ๐Ÿ“ž 116 117 (available 24/7).
  • National Emergency Hotline: In the event of immediate danger to life, call the ambulance service at ๐Ÿ“ž 113.
Which treatment method is best suited for me?

Which treatment method is best suited for you is something we figure out together during the first conversations. The choice depends on your challenges, your personality, your life situation, and what scientific research shows has the best effect on your difficulties.

As a specialist, I have training in and experience with several different treatment approaches. This allows me to adapt the method to your unique needs, rather than forcing you into one specific framework. I do not rely on a single method for everyone but often combine different treatment approaches to create change and promote the best possible improvement.

The most common approaches I use are:

  • Psychodynamic psychotherapy
  • Cognitive behavioural therapy
  • Mentalisation-based therapy
  • Family therapy
  • Group therapy

Psychoeducation (Knowledge sharing)

I use psychoeducation as an integrated part of treatment for all patients. This is a systematic and educational approach where we teach you and possibly your family about the relevant mental health challenge or diagnosis. Understanding your own condition and your own reaction patterns is often half the battle. The goal is not just to provide dry information but to equip you with knowledge that makes it easier to cope with everyday life.

Medication

As a psychiatrist (physician), I can assess whether medication can be a useful support for you during the treatment process. If medication is relevant, it is almost always used in combination with talk therapy and close medical follow-up.

Binge eating and BED | psychiatrist in Oslo โ€” LumaCare Mental Helse AS