Targeting dietary restraint to reduce binge eating: a randomised controlled trial of a blended internet- and smartphone app-based intervention

Existing internet-based prevention and treatment programmes for binge eating are composed of multiple distinct modules that are designed to target a broad range of risk or maintaining factors. Such multi-modular programmes (1) may be unnecessarily long for those who do not require a full course of i...

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Veröffentlicht in:Psychological medicine 2023-03, Vol.53 (4), p.1277-1287
Hauptverfasser: Linardon, Jake, Messer, Mariel, Shatte, Adrian, Skvarc, David, Rosato, John, Rathgen, April, Fuller-Tyszkiewicz, Matthew
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container_end_page 1287
container_issue 4
container_start_page 1277
container_title Psychological medicine
container_volume 53
creator Linardon, Jake
Messer, Mariel
Shatte, Adrian
Skvarc, David
Rosato, John
Rathgen, April
Fuller-Tyszkiewicz, Matthew
description Existing internet-based prevention and treatment programmes for binge eating are composed of multiple distinct modules that are designed to target a broad range of risk or maintaining factors. Such multi-modular programmes (1) may be unnecessarily long for those who do not require a full course of intervention and (2) make it difficult to distinguish those techniques that are effective from those that are redundant. Since dietary restraint is a well-replicated risk and maintaining factor for binge eating, we developed an internet- and app-based intervention composed solely of cognitive-behavioural techniques designed to modify dietary restraint as a mechanism to target binge eating. We tested the efficacy of this combined selective and indicated prevention programme in 403 participants, most of whom were highly symptomatic (90% reported binge eating once per week). Participants were randomly assigned to the internet intervention ( = 201) or an informational control group ( = 202). The primary outcome was objective binge-eating frequency. Secondary outcomes were indices of dietary restraint, shape, weight, and eating concerns, subjective binge eating, disinhibition, and psychological distress. Analyses were intention-to-treat. Intervention participants reported greater reductions in objective binge-eating episodes compared to the control group at post-test (small effect size). Significant effects were also observed on each of the secondary outcomes (small to large effect sizes). Improvements were sustained at 8 week follow-up. Highly focused digital interventions that target one central risk/maintaining factor may be sufficient to induce meaningful change in core eating disorder symptoms.
doi_str_mv 10.1017/S0033291721002786
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Highly focused digital interventions that target one central risk/maintaining factor may be sufficient to induce meaningful change in core eating disorder symptoms.</abstract><cop>Cambridge, UK</cop><pub>Cambridge University Press</pub><pmid>34247660</pmid><doi>10.1017/S0033291721002786</doi><tpages>11</tpages></addata></record>
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source MEDLINE; Cambridge Journals; Applied Social Sciences Index & Abstracts (ASSIA)
subjects Binge eating
Binge-Eating Disorder - diagnosis
Binge-Eating Disorder - prevention & control
Bulimia
Bulimia - prevention & control
Cognitive ability
Cognitive behavioral therapy
Cognitive Behavioral Therapy - methods
Cognitive-behavioral factors
Disinhibition
Eating disorders
Efficacy
Humans
Internet
Internet access
Intervention
Mental health
Mobile Applications
Original Article
Prevention
Prevention programs
Psychological distress
Smartphones
Treatment Outcome
Treatment programs
title Targeting dietary restraint to reduce binge eating: a randomised controlled trial of a blended internet- and smartphone app-based intervention
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