An effectiveness trial of a dissonance-based eating disorder prevention program for high-risk adolescent girls

Eric Stice, Paul Rohde, Jeff Gau, Heather Shaw, Eric Stice, Paul Rohde, Jeff Gau, Heather Shaw

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.

(c) 2009 APA, all rights reserved.

Figures

Figure 1
Figure 1
Participant Flow Throughout the Study

Source: PubMed

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