Project HOME: Home-Based Treatment Options and Mechanisms for Eating Disorders

NACompletedINTERVENTIONAL
Enrollment

77

Participants

Timeline

Start Date

August 1, 2022

Primary Completion Date

March 30, 2025

Study Completion Date

April 30, 2025

Conditions
Anorexia NervosaEating Disorders
Interventions
BEHAVIORAL

Family-based treatment (FBT)

FBT is a structured behavioral treatment focused on empowering caregivers to take charge of the adolescent's eating behavior and return him/her to a normative weight and developmental trajectory. FBT involves three consecutive phases: 1) caregivers are fully in control of the adolescent's eating; 2) control of eating is gradually returned to the adolescent; and 3) developmental issues are explored. In the current study, FBT is adapted for delivery in the home setting in the following ways: intensified dose of treatment (2-6 hours of therapy per week over 10 - 32 weeks); use of clinician as an additional support to the family; multiple family meals in the home and community; sociocultural tailoring; and inclusion of supplemental individual work with the adolescent to improve emotion regulation/distress tolerance.

BEHAVIORAL

Integrative family therapy

The integrated family therapy approach includes psychoeducation, supportive family therapy, and elements of cognitive-behavioral interventions. Families may be referred for additional nutritional counseling and prescribed a meal plan as indicated. Typical strategies include educating families on the presentation and prognosis of adolescent AN; identifying dysfunctional family structures/alliances and communication patterns; using reflective listening to engage and validate family members; challenging maladaptive beliefs about eating and weight; and supporting families in developing strategies for management of both general and eating disorder-specific distress. Treatment is generally non-directive.

Trial Locations (3)

15213

University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh

02860

Gateway Healthcare, Pawtucket

02906

The Providence Center, Providence

All Listed Sponsors
collaborator

National Institute of Mental Health (NIMH)

NIH

collaborator

Lifespan

OTHER

collaborator

Rhode Island College

OTHER

lead

University of Pittsburgh

OTHER