77
Participants
Start Date
August 1, 2022
Primary Completion Date
March 30, 2025
Study Completion Date
April 30, 2025
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.
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.
University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh
Gateway Healthcare, Pawtucket
The Providence Center, Providence
National Institute of Mental Health (NIMH)
NIH
Lifespan
OTHER
Rhode Island College
OTHER
University of Pittsburgh
OTHER