Eating Disorders, where I refer
Eating disorders are a serious specialty area. The work needs medical monitoring, nutritional support, family coordination, and a clinician whose primary focus is right there. I run a small solo practice, and I don’t take eating disorders on as primary clinical work. This page is for you to know who I’d send you to instead.
Where I refer
For multidisciplinary care, including the step-down after a hospital stay, PsyMed Consultants, led by Dr. Lee Ee Lian. Dr. Lee founded the eating disorders programme at Singapore General Hospital and has been doing this work for more than three decades. Her team holds psychiatry, psychology, and dietetics in one place, their principal dietitian, Grace Quek Wei Ern, is the only FBT-trained dietitian in Asia. This is the structure to look for when medical and nutritional pieces have to be held alongside the therapy, or when someone is stepping down from inpatient care and needs a wrap-around team to land softly. Clinics at Mount Elizabeth Novena and Gleneagles.
For adults and adolescents, outpatient psychological work, where the medical side is stable and the work is mostly therapeutic, Amerie Baeg at Illuminate Psychology Practice. She’s a clinical psychologist with specific eating-disorder training. Single clinician, single clinic.
For children and younger adolescents, particularly when there’s a paediatric piece (growth concerns, developmental considerations, nutrition tracking, adolescent medicine), Dr. Misa Noda at Petite Practice. She’s a Consultant Paediatrician trained at Duke-NUS Medical School with prior experience at KK Women’s and Children’s Hospital, and her adolescent-medicine practice includes eating disorders. Fluent in English and Japanese, useful for some Japanese-speaking families.
For severe cases needing medical monitoring or inpatient care, the Singapore General Hospital Eating Disorders Programme and the IMH Eating Disorders service. These are the right route when weight, electrolytes, or cardiovascular function are unstable, or when outpatient work hasn’t been enough.
If you’d like help figuring out where you fit
The fifteen-minute Meet & Greet is free and exists for exactly this kind of triage. I’ll point you toward whichever of the above makes sense for your situation, or to a different referrer entirely if the picture suggests something else. I won’t take you on for primary eating-disorder work, but a brief conversation to land you in the right place is something I’m happy to do.