An effectiveness trial of a dissonance-based eating disorder prevention program for high-risk adolescent girls.
- 1 January 2009
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Psychological Association (APA) in Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology
- Vol. 77 (5) , 825-834
- https://doi.org/10.1037/a0016132
Abstract
Efficacy trials indicate that an eating disorder prevention program involving dissonance-inducing activities that decrease thin-ideal internalization reduces risk for current and future eating pathology, yet it is unclear whether this program produces effects under real-world conditions. The present effectiveness trial tested whether this program produced effects when school staff recruit participants and deliver the intervention. Adolescent girls with body image concerns (N = 306; M age = 15.7, SD = 1.1) randomized to the dissonance intervention showed significantly greater decreases in thin-ideal internalization, body dissatisfaction, dieting attempts, and eating disorder symptoms from pretest to posttest than did those assigned to a psychoeducational brochure control condition, with the effects for body dissatisfaction, dieting, and eating disorder symptoms persisting through 1-year follow-up. Effects were slightly smaller than those observed in a prior efficacy trial, suggesting that this program is effective under real-world conditions, but that facilitator selection, training, and supervision could be improved.Keywords
Funding Information
- National Institutes of Health (MH70699)
This publication has 34 references indexed in Scilit:
- Effects of a cognitive dissonance‐based eating disorder prevention program are similar for Asian American, Hispanic, and White participantsInternational Journal of Eating Disorders, 2008
- Brief cognitive-behavioral depression prevention program for high-risk adolescents outperforms two alternative interventions: A randomized efficacy trial.Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology, 2008
- Testing mediators of intervention effects in randomized controlled trials: An evaluation of two eating disorder prevention programs.Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology, 2007
- Innovative interventions for disordered eating: Evaluating dissonance‐based and yoga interventionsInternational Journal of Eating Disorders, 2006
- An Efficacy/Effectiveness Study of Cognitive-Behavioral Treatment for Adolescents With Comorbid Major Depression and Conduct DisorderJournal of the American Academy of Child & Adolescent Psychiatry, 2004
- Prospective Relations Between Bulimic Pathology, Depression, and Substance Abuse: Unpacking Comorbidity in Adolescent Girls.Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology, 2004
- School-Based Peer Support Groups: A New Approach to the Prevention of Disordered EatingEating Disorders, 2003
- Moving Treatment Research From Clinical Trials to the Real WorldPsychiatric Services, 2003
- Mind over matter: Internalization of the thinness norm as a moderator of responsiveness to norm misperception education in college women.Health Psychology, 2002
- Body mass index as a measure of adiposity among children and adolescents: A validation studyPublished by Elsevier ,1998