---
title: "OSFED Treatment Program"
date: 2025-09-25
author: "Chris Willson"
---

# OSFED Treatment Program

## What Is OSFED?



OSFED (Other Specified Feeding or Eating Disorder) is a clinical diagnosis for experiences that have significant medical, nutritional or social impact but don’t meet the criteria for another named eating disorder. OSFED may include presentations such as atypical anorexia nervosa, patterns with binge or purge behaviors that occur less frequently or for shorter duration, purging without binge episodes or night-eating presentations.

OSFED can affect anyone of any age, size, gender or background and often co-occurs with anxiety, OCD, depression, trauma responses, ADHD or autism. With compassionate, evidence-based care, many people regain confidence, restore stability, and reconnect with their daily lives.











![Therapist meeting with a smiling teen during an OSFED treatment session](https://newcircle.com/wp-content/uploads/therapy-session.webp "5")










Signs and symptoms of OSFED



Recognizing the signs is a courageous and vital step toward recovery. Here are some common symptoms:









## Flexible criteria, real impact





Even if symptoms don’t fit neatly into one category, they can still disrupt health, mood, and daily functioning. As patterns become more rigid, the emotional and practical costs often increase.









## Changes in intake and patterns





Irregular intake, strict rules, or cycles of avoidance and compensation can take hold, feel hard to shift, and reduce flexibility across school, work, relationships, and everyday plans.









## Medical and cognitive effects





Fatigue, dizziness, concentration challenges, mood changes, or medical concerns related to undernutrition or electrolyte imbalances can occur, narrowing focus and making daily decisions feel more difficult.









## Social and emotional impact





Tension around mealtimes, isolation, or conflict at home, school, or work can increase, reducing participation in activities that once felt easy and limiting supportive connections







## Not defined by appearance





OSFED can affect people of any size and is never validated by how someone looks, since medical risk and distress are not reliably visible from the outside.







## Compensatory behaviors





Purging or other compensatory actions may be used to reduce discomfort after eating, which increases medical risk and reinforces patterns that feel more urgent and difficult to interrupt.









## All-or-nothing thinking





Perfectionistic rules turn minor deviations into perceived failures, prompting overcorrection or avoidance and shrinking opportunities to practice flexibility and build confidence through small wins.









## Excessive or compensatory exercise





Movement is used primarily to offset intake or ease distress, escalating in intensity or duration despite pain, exhaustion, or schedule conflicts, while rest days trigger guilt and worry.

















## Healing with respect and support



You deserve support that feels safe, inclusive and personal. At NewCircle, we meet you with respect, reduce shame and honour your identity and culture. Together, we focus on practical skills that fit into your daily life, progressing through small victories with clear guidance and consistent support.



[Get Started](/about/#contact)





[Learn More](https://newcircle.com/admissions/)















## OSFED treatment offerings



NewCircle offers a comprehensive range of services tailored to meet each individual’s unique journey:







- **Residential Treatment**: Round-the-clock support in a calm, welcoming environment focused on stabilization, safety, and skill building that sets the groundwork for sustainable change.
- **Partial Hospitalization Program (PHP)**: Structured daytime care that blends individual therapy, skills groups, supported mealtimes, and medical and nutrition monitoring, with evenings at home to practice new routines. Five to six days a week.
- **Intensive Outpatient Program (IOP)**: Flexible care, four days per week. Ideal for step-down support or when you are balancing school, work, or caretaking while continuing focused therapeutic work.
- **Therapy Approaches**: Your care may include therapies like CBT-E, DBT skills, ACT, or family-based support. Sessions focus on calming your system, building body confidence, increasing awareness, and receiving steady, compassionate guidance.
- **Nutrition and Eating Recovery Support**: Collaborative, person-centered guidance that restores consistent intake and expands flexibility through graded practice and structured support, with care that honors sensory needs, culture, and access.





- **Family &amp; Community Involvement:** Education, coaching, and family therapy that reduce conflict and build consistent support at home, with coordination across schools and community providers when helpful.
- **Integrated Mental Health Care**: Treatment for co-occurring anxiety, depression, OCD, PTSD, ADHD, and autism-related needs that may interact with OSFED, aligned under one care plan.
- **Creative and Movement-Based Therapies**: Art, movement, and recreation groups designed to calm the body, encourage expression, and build confidence for everyday life.
- **Affirming, Inclusive Environmen**t: Care that is [inclusive](/programs/lgbtqia/) and [culturally responsive](/programs/bipoc/), welcoming people from all backgrounds with respect and compassion.
- **Therapy Dog Companions**: On-site canine support is available to increase calm and make therapeutic work more approachable.









![Therapist meeting with a teen for a one-on-one consultation.](https://newcircle.com/wp-content/uploads/female-friends.webp "6")









## What happens after treatment?



Recovery is an ongoing process, and care doesn’t stop when treatment does. Many clients step down into intensive outpatient (IOP) or outpatient therapy as they take on more of their daily life. From the outset, our team will help you create a personalized and realistic aftercare plan. This may include relapse prevention strategies, ongoing therapy, nutrition counseling, peer support and connections to community resources.

Regular check-ins are built into your plan to provide encouragement, accountability and flexibility. We want to help you stay grounded in recovery while giving you space to adapt to new challenges and opportunities for growth.











### NewCircle Reviews











*“After my whole life of never being sure I could get help, this place blew me out of the water. I have fully graduated out of the program and my life is forever changed. All of the staff are amazing individuals who are there to really change lives. The facility is beautiful and has so many amazing qualities that it would take me pages to describe them. If you need help, I HIGHLY recommend here!”*



##### – Residential Alumni, NewCircle



###### *Date: 1/6/2026*











*“New Circle really did change my life for the better. I completed two months of Res and a month of PHP. The RC’s (especially Timmy) are fantastic and wonderful. Larry is the best intake coordinator in the WORLD (so kind and communicative!). The clinicians helped me work through so many struggles and to build a support system at home. This treatment program is SO individualized; it is able to meet the needs of so many individuals. There are so many things I could say, so I will leave it on this note…. If you are considering coming to New Circle, yes. Come, without a doubt. I am in a larger body, and that did not negatively impact my treatment whatsoever. I felt very accepted by staff. After struggling with my eating disorder from early childhood into adulthood, I’m finally able to see a life for myself without bulimia.”*



##### – Residential &amp; PHP Alumni, NewCircle



###### *Date: 3/10/2026*











*“I would suggest this program to anybody struggling with an eating disorder. This program is so supportive and positive the people who work here really care about their jobs and the effect they have on others. From therapists all the way to nursing, everyone here is amazing!! If you’re struggling in any way, please call NewCircle.”*



##### – Program Alumni, NewCircle



###### *Date: 2/20/2026*












Frequently asked questions







### [Is OSFED a less serious diagnosis?](#432fe4d27875bfdf4)



No. OSFED is a clinically recognized eating disorder that can be just as challenging and harmful as other diagnoses. It requires the same level of care, attention, and respect to support full recovery.





### [Who can be diagnosed with OSFED?](#7a72a2f2fda851f1e)



Anyone. OSFED can affect people of any age, body size, gender identity, or cultural background. Diagnosis is based on eating patterns and their impact on health and daily life, rather than appearance.





### [How is OSFED treated at NewCircle?](#61a42cc74bfa4c7d0)



Treatment is individualized and collaborative. Our team employs evidence-based approaches, including CBT-E, DBT skills, ACT, exposure therapy, and nutrition counseling. All care is provided within a trauma-informed, LGBTQ-affirming environment to ensure safety and inclusivity.





### [How long does treatment take?](#c2bd5db6ff67bb0fe)



There is no single timeline for recovery. Many clients start with higher levels of support and gradually transition to less structured care as they progress. Typical stays can vary:

- Residential treatment: 30–90 days
- Partial Hospitalization Program (PHP): 30–90 days
- Intensive Outpatient Program (IOP): 30–120 days

Our team will work with you to determine the best pace, adjusting treatment to meet your unique needs, progress, and comfort level.







### [Can recovery last?](#2a99b26097c9664e2)



Yes. With consistent practice, supportive resources, and compassionate clinical guidance, recovery gains can be sustained and integrated into everyday life.

















## Featured articles







- ![Three young women sitting on the grass in a sunny park, representing hopeful recovery and social connection after orthorexia.](https://newcircle.com/wp-content/uploads/women-outdoors.webp "Is It Healthy Eating or Orthorexia Nervosa? 2")
    
    March 26, 2026•12 min•
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    ### Is It Healthy Eating or Orthorexia Nervosa?
    
    
    
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    February 26, 2026•6 min•
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    ### How to Support a Loved One in Eating Disorder Treatment
    
    
    
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    February 23, 2026•7 min•
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    ### Beyond the Scale: The Importance of Weight-Neutral Eating Disorder Treatment
    
    
    
    Content note: This article discusses eating disorders and weight stigma. It \[...\]
    
    
    
    [Read More](https://newcircle.com/blog/weight-neutral-ed-treatment/)







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