Guided Self-Help Treatment for Children and Young People With Eating Disorders: A Proof-Of-Concept Pilot Study

To conduct a proof-of-concept pilot study of a CBT guided self-help intervention for children and young people with eating disorders. Children and young people were recruited from two outpatient eating disorder services in England. They received a CBT guided self-help intervention consisting of eigh...

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Veröffentlicht in:European eating disorders review 2025-01
Hauptverfasser: Davey, Emily, Bryant-Waugh, Rachel, Bennett, Sophie D, Micali, Nadia, Baudinet, Julian, Konstantellou, Anna, Clark-Stone, Sam, Green, Amelia, Shafran, Roz
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:To conduct a proof-of-concept pilot study of a CBT guided self-help intervention for children and young people with eating disorders. Children and young people were recruited from two outpatient eating disorder services in England. They received a CBT guided self-help intervention consisting of eight modules and weekly support sessions. Clinical outcomes (eating disorder psychopathology and associated impairment, changes in %median BMI, depression, anxiety, and behavioural difficulties) were assessed at baseline and post-intervention (12 weeks). Qualitative data were collected for future intervention refinement. Six female adolescents (aged 13-17) received the CBT guided self-help intervention. All participants completed a minimum of six modules and six support sessions. Quantitative and qualitative feedback suggested that the intervention was acceptable. From baseline to post-intervention, there was a reduction in eating disorder psychopathology and impairment, along with an increase in %median BMI. Outcomes for depression, anxiety and behavioural difficulties were mixed. The CBT guided self-help intervention was feasibly implemented, acceptable to participants, and showed potential to produce clinical benefits. While promising, these findings are preliminary and derived from a small, non-randomised sample of White female adolescents. More rigorous evaluation with a randomised design and a larger, representative sample is warranted.
ISSN:1072-4133
1099-0968
1099-0968
DOI:10.1002/erv.3171