Connecting mental health practitioners to improve multidisciplinary mental health care in Australia.
MHPN’s interactive webinars feature case-based discussions and Q&A sessions led by top experts, modeling multidisciplinary practice and collaborative care.
Our podcasts feature local and international mental health experts in conversation on a variety of topics related to mental wellbeing, multidisciplinary practice, and collaborative care.
Extend your knowledge and explore the following curated compilation of webinars, podcasts and networks, highlighting selected topics of interest.
Connecting mental health practitioners to improve multidisciplinary mental health care in Australia.
Our podcasts feature local and international mental health experts in conversation on a variety of topics related to mental wellbeing, multidisciplinary practice, and collaborative care.
MHPN’s interactive webinars feature case-based discussions and Q&A sessions led by top experts, modeling multidisciplinary practice and collaborative care.
Extend your knowledge and explore the following curated compilation of webinars, podcasts and networks, highlighting selected topics of interest.
Coming soon.
This episode of Eating Disorders: Beyond the Unknown will explore the experience of living with, recovering from, and supporting someone with bulimia nervosa or binge eating disorder. Join our co-hosts; psychologist and National Director of the National Eating Disorders Collaboration (NEDC), Dr Beth Shelton; and carer and CEO of Eating Disorders Victoria (EDV), Belinda Caldwell, as they delve into those factors which underpin these types of eating disorders, and the supports that are available to help someone to recovery.
Listeners will hear Desi’s journey – from living for over 25 years with bulimia, to her recovery. Responding to and building on Desi’s lived experience, Beth and Belinda unpack the key factors associated with bulimia and binge eating such as the underlying cycle of thoughts and behaviours, the hidden nature of eating disorders, and the role of treatment in successfully shifting the harmful cycle that perpetuates the eating disorder. Beth and Belinda explore ways in which a clinician can open up the conversation about eating and bodies to ensure that early identification can occur, and the person experiencing an eating disorder can access the treatment needed and move towards recovery.
Eating Disorders: Beyond the Unknown is a podcast series produced in partnership by the National Eating Disorders Collaboration (NEDC) and the Mental Health Professionals Network (MHPN).
Dr. Beth Shelton is National Director of the National Eating Disorder Collaboration (NEDC), leading a team which works collaboratively with the eating disorder sector to build a safe, consistent and accessible system of care for people experiencing eating disorders and their families/supports. The NEDC synthesizes research evidence, clinical expertise and lived experience in national standards and workforce initiatives to support nationally consistent approaches to prevention, early intervention and treatment. Current priorities are partnering with ANZAED in the development of a credentialing system for eating disorder professionals, and supporting early intervention in primary care. Dr. Shelton is immediate past president of the Australia and New Zealand Academy for Eating Disorders.
Dr. Shelton is also a clinician – a psychologist with a private practice in Melbourne – working with individuals experiencing eating disorders and their families/supports. For more than a decade she provided complex case consultation, training and service development in Victorian mental health services at the Victorian Centre of Excellence in Eating Disorders. Dr. Shelton developed and led an innovative community early intervention program at Monash Link Community Health Service and was clinical lead of the adult outpatient team of Monash Health’s eating disorder treatment service. Recent projects include leading the implementation of Multi-Family Therapy for Anorexia Nervosa in Victoria, and early intervention projects at the Australian Ballet and the Victorian College of the Arts, UniMelb.
Dr.Shelton has regularly presented papers, plenary presentations and workshops. Body Image treatment is an ongoing focus for this work, as is service development, particularly early intervention initiatives. She has a distinguished professional history in contemporary dance and is interested in the role of movement and embodied experience in evidence-based interventions for disordered eating and body image problems.
Belinda’s professional experience can be best summed up by a passionate commitment to improving health outcomes, either through prevention programs or primary care, and more recently eating disorders treatment. Belinda’s role as CEO of Australian Practice Nurses Association was driven by the goal of improving health outcomes for primary care consumers through access to a better care from a highly qualified nurse in general practice medical centres.
Belinda’s daughter developed Anorexia Nervosa in 2011 and she started to combine her professional expertise with a new found passion for making a difference in eating disorders. Prior to joining EDV, Belinda was working at the Victorian Centre of Excellence in Eating Disorders as a Carer Consultant and Project Manager, developing new strategies and resources for effecting greater and more effective carer inclusion in ED treatment models.
Belinda was a founding board member and Vice-Chair of Eating Disorders Families Australia. Belinda was also Vice-Chair of the global not for profit Families Empowered and Supporting Treatment of Eating Disorders (FEAST).
Belinda’s goals for the future are to continue to be a voice of advocacy and instrument of change in the eating disorders sector in Australia.
After a lifelong battle with body image issues and a severe eating disorder, finally, at age 50, Desi found a calmness and control over her life that she never knew was possible.
Her confidence skyrocketed, her insecurities just seem to fade away and socialising became something she now thrived on.
After many years of trying to get help, it was the perfect duo that assisted her in her recovery – a psychologist and a dietician who specialised in eating disorders. They promised her that recovery was indeed possible. No one had ever communicated this message with such conviction. It was their assurance and guidance that saved her.
What seemed like an impossibility, turned out to be easier than she had imagined.
She always promised herself that if she ever got better, she would help others recover from their eating disorder or addictions. That was and still is her mission.
Desi also enjoys supporting others who have a philanthropic mission, including fundraising for neurological disorders which are close to her heart, refugees or anything which involves personal suffering.
These days, she finds happiness in cooking and enjoying meals with her family. She runs a recipe blog with the intention of inspiring others to do the same. Her three adult children are her greatest fans.Food was no longer the enemy but her saviour. Something she could only have dreamed about
The resources included in this document were accurate at the time of publication.
This podcast is provided for information purposes only and to provide a broad public understanding of various mental health topics. The podcast may represent the views of the presenters and not necessarily the views of the Mental Health Professionals’ Network (‘MHPN‘). The podcast is not to be relied upon as medical advice, or as a substitute for medical advice, does not establish a provider-patient relationship and should not be a substitute for individual clinical judgement. By accessing MHPN‘s podcasts you also agree to the full terms and conditions of the MHPN Website.
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