Dissonance Eating Disorder Prevention: Clinician Led, Peer Led vs Web Delivered
Status: | Active, not recruiting |
---|---|
Conditions: | Psychiatric |
Therapuetic Areas: | Psychiatry / Psychology |
Healthy: | No |
Age Range: | 17 - 22 |
Updated: | 9/2/2018 |
Start Date: | April 2013 |
End Date: | March 2019 |
Dissonance Eating Disorder Prevention: Clinician Led, Peer Led vs Web Delivered (Formerly: Effectiveness Trial of Peer-Led Dissonance Eating Disorder Prevention Groups)
Five percent of young women meet criteria for anorexia nervosa, bulimia nervosa, or binge
eating disorder, with another 5% meeting criteria for Eating Disorder Not Otherwise Specified
(ED-NOS), which includes subthreshold variants of these disorders. Over half of those
presenting for eating disorder treatment meet criteria for ED-NOS and both threshold cases
and ED-NOS are marked by chronicity, relapse, distress, functional impairment, and increased
risk for future obesity, depression, suicide attempts, anxiety disorders, substance abuse,
morbidity, and mortality. Anorexia and bulimia nervosa show stronger relations to suicide
attempts, outpatient/inpatient treatment, and functional impairment than most other
psychiatric disorders. Treatment of eating disorders is very expensive, similar to the cost
for schizophrenia treatment, and is effective for only 40-60% of patients. Thus, a public
health priority is to develop and disseminate effective eating disorder prevention programs.
eating disorder, with another 5% meeting criteria for Eating Disorder Not Otherwise Specified
(ED-NOS), which includes subthreshold variants of these disorders. Over half of those
presenting for eating disorder treatment meet criteria for ED-NOS and both threshold cases
and ED-NOS are marked by chronicity, relapse, distress, functional impairment, and increased
risk for future obesity, depression, suicide attempts, anxiety disorders, substance abuse,
morbidity, and mortality. Anorexia and bulimia nervosa show stronger relations to suicide
attempts, outpatient/inpatient treatment, and functional impairment than most other
psychiatric disorders. Treatment of eating disorders is very expensive, similar to the cost
for schizophrenia treatment, and is effective for only 40-60% of patients. Thus, a public
health priority is to develop and disseminate effective eating disorder prevention programs.
Although dozens of eating disorder prevention programs have been evaluated, only a
dissonance-based program (the Body Project) has significantly reduced future onset of
threshold and subthreshold eating disorders through long-term follow-up. An effectiveness
trial found that the Body Project produced significant reductions in risk factors, eating
disorder symptoms, and functional impairment relative to educational brochure controls, with
some effects persisting through 3-yr follow-up when high school clinicians recruited students
and delivered the program. These trials confirm the efficacy and effectiveness of the Body
Project, but revealed a key dissemination barrier; it can be difficult to identify and
recruit clinicians at high schools and colleges with the time and expertise to competently
deliver the program.
One solution to this key dissemination barrier is to train students in established peer
leader programs at colleges to recruit high-risk students and deliver the program. Another
solution to this dissemination barrier would be to deliver the Body Project via the Internet.
Because peer-led groups and Internet delivery of the Body Project could markedly extend the
reach and sustainability of this evidence-based program, we propose to conduct the first
large multi-site effectiveness trial that directly compares the effects and cost
effectiveness of peer-led Body Project groups, the eBody Project intervention, and
clinician-led Body Project groups to an educational video control condition.
dissonance-based program (the Body Project) has significantly reduced future onset of
threshold and subthreshold eating disorders through long-term follow-up. An effectiveness
trial found that the Body Project produced significant reductions in risk factors, eating
disorder symptoms, and functional impairment relative to educational brochure controls, with
some effects persisting through 3-yr follow-up when high school clinicians recruited students
and delivered the program. These trials confirm the efficacy and effectiveness of the Body
Project, but revealed a key dissemination barrier; it can be difficult to identify and
recruit clinicians at high schools and colleges with the time and expertise to competently
deliver the program.
One solution to this key dissemination barrier is to train students in established peer
leader programs at colleges to recruit high-risk students and deliver the program. Another
solution to this dissemination barrier would be to deliver the Body Project via the Internet.
Because peer-led groups and Internet delivery of the Body Project could markedly extend the
reach and sustainability of this evidence-based program, we propose to conduct the first
large multi-site effectiveness trial that directly compares the effects and cost
effectiveness of peer-led Body Project groups, the eBody Project intervention, and
clinician-led Body Project groups to an educational video control condition.
Inclusion Criteria:
- Body image concerns
- Attend University of Oregon, Oregon State University, University of Texas at Austin,
or Southwestern University
Exclusion Criteria:
- Meeting criteria for anorexia nervosa, bulimia nervosa, or binge eating disorder
- Suicidal ideation
We found this trial at
3
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