| Level 1: Outpatient | Level 2: Intensive Outpatient | Level 3: Partial Hospitalization (Full-Day Outpatient
Care)a | Level 4: Residential Treatment Center | Level 5: Inpatient Hospitalization |
|---|
| Medical status | Medically stable to the
extent that more extensive medical monitoring, as defined in levels
4 and 5, is not required | Medically stable to the extent that intravenous fluids,
nasogastric tube feedings, or multiple daily laboratory tests are not
needed | For adults: Heart
rate <40 bpm; blood pressure <90/60 mmHg; glucose
< 60 mg/dl; potassium < 3 mEq/L;
electrolyte imbalance; temperature < 97.0°F; dehydration; hepatic,
renal, or cardiovascular organ compromise requiring acute treatment;
poorly controlled diabetes For children and adolescents: Heart
rate near 40 bpm, orthostatic blood pressure changes (> 20 bpm
increase in heart rate or >10 mmHg to 20 mmHg drop), blood pressure
<80/50 mmHg, hypokalemia,b hypophosphatemia,
or hypomagnesemia |
| Suicidalityc | If suicidality is present,
inpatient monitoring and treatment may be needed depending on the
estimated level of risk | Specific plan with high lethality or intent; admission
may also be indicated in patient with suicidal ideas or after a
suicide attempt or aborted attempt, depending on the presence or
absence of other factors modulating suicide risk |
| Weight as percentage of healthy body weightd | Generally >85% | Generally >80% | Generally >80% | Generally <85% | Generally <85%; acute weight decline with
food refusal even if not <85% of healthy body weight |
| Motivation to recover, including cooperativeness, insight,
and ability to control obsessive thoughts | Fair-to-good motivation | Fair motivation | Partial motivation; cooperative; patient preoccupied
with intrusive, repetitive thoughtse >3
hours/day | Poor-to-fair motivation; patient preoccupied with intrusive
repetitive thoughtse 46 hours
a day; patient cooperative with highly structured treatment | Very poor to poor motivation; patient preoccupied with
intrusive repetitive thoughtse; patient
uncooperative with treatment or cooperative only in highly structured
environment |
| Co-occurring disorders (substance use, depression,
anxiety) | Presence of comorbid condition
may influence choice of level of care | Any existing psychiatric disorder that would require
hospitalization |
| Structure needed for eating/gaining weight | Self-sufficient | Self-sufficient | Needs some structure to gain weight | Needs supervision at all meals or will restrict eating | Needs supervision during and after all meals or nasogastric/special
feeding modality |
| Ability to control compulsive exercising | Can manage compulsive exercising through self-control | Some degree of external
structure beyond self-control required to prevent patient from compulsive
exercising; rarely a sole indication for increasing the level of
care |
| Purging behavior (laxatives and diuretics) | Can greatly reduce incidents
of purging in an unstructured setting; no significant medical complications,
such as electrocardiographic or other abnormalities, suggesting
the need for hospitalization | Can ask for and use support from others or use cognitive
and behavioral skills to inhibit purging | Needs supervision during and after all meals and in bathrooms;
unable to control multiple daily episodes of purging that are severe,
persistent, and disabling, despite appropriate trials of outpatient
care, even if routine laboratory test results reveal no obvious
metabolic abnormalities |
| Environmental stress | Others able to provide adequate emotional
and practical support and structure | Others able to provide at least limited support and
structure | Severe family conflict or
problems or absence of family so patient is unable to receive structured
treatment in home; patient lives alone without adequate support
system |
| Geographic availability of treatment program | Patient lives near treatment
setting | Treatment program is too
distant for patient to participate from home |