Title: Is there hope for eating disorder prevention
1Is there hope for eating disorder prevention?
- Andrew Hill
- Institute of Health Sciences
- University of Leeds
2The prevention spectrum
- Primary Secondary Tertiary
-
Prevention Early recognition Intervention
Treatment
Education
Referral
Information
Aftercare
Assessment
Early identification
Outpatient treatment
Day-patient treatment
3The prevention spectrum
- Primary Secondary Tertiary
-
Prevention Early recognition Intervention
Treatment
Education
Referral
Information
Aftercare
Assessment
Early identification
Outpatient treatment
Day-patient treatment
a gram of prevention is worth a kilogram of cure
4The prevention spectrum
- Primary Secondary Tertiary
-
Prevention Early recognition Intervention
Treatment
Education
Referral
Information
Aftercare
Assessment
Early identification
Outpatient treatment
Day-patient treatment
51 prevention - what has been tried?
- Content
- information - psychoeducation
- media literacy
- dissonance-inducing
- behavioural solutions
- Delivery
- school/college based
- whole school plus parents
- teacher-led or peer led
- work book tasks and discussion forums
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91 prevention - what works?
- Meta-analysis (Stice et al, 2007)
- 51 programmes, 68 trials, 81 effect sizes
- 51 at least 1 risk factor
- 29 in eating pathology
- More effective programmes were
- selective interactive
- multi-session offered solely to females
- to participants 15 without psychoeducation
10Other issues
- what should programmes include?
- eating disorder specific or global mental health?
- body image, thin culture, fat talk
- vs. coping with stress, ve self-esteem
11Incidence of mental health problems
- organic factors environ. stress exploitation
- coping skills self-esteem social support
-
- Prevention by
- weakening the numerator, and/or
- strengthening the denominator
Albee, 1983
12The cult of thinness
13Incidence of mental health problems
- organic factors environ. stress exploitation
- coping skills self-esteem social support
-
- Prevention by
- weakening the numerator, and/or
- strengthening the denominator
irresistible internal/external forces
to understand, buffer, resist
Albee, 1983
14Specific and non-specific risk
Connors, 1996
15Other issues
- what should programmes include?
- eating disorder specific or global mental health?
- differences in impact?
- greatest change is increased knowledge
- greatest benefit in those at higher risk
16The prevention spectrum
- Primary Secondary Tertiary
-
Prevention Early recognition Intervention
Treatment
Education
Referral
Information
Aftercare
Assessment
Early identification
Outpatient treatment
Day-patient treatment
17Secondary prevention initiatives
- National Eating Disorders Screening Program (US)
- started in 1996
- college campuses
- aims to
- raise awareness
- connect at-risk students with resources
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19Secondary prevention
- Benefits
- potentially resource efficient
- reach beyond school/college
- Limitations
- treatment resource intensive
- IT dependent
- uptake unclear
20Integrating ED obesity prevention?
- shared risk
- adolescent dieting e.g. Neumark-Sztainer et al
(2006) - media inactivity, body dissatisfaction
- weight-related teasing
- health at every size movement
- ve body image, active lifestyle, better eating
habits, life skills, social support
21Early obesity management and EDs?
- clinical (Epstein)
- 4 incidence in 10 years
- no change in ED measures in 2 yrs
- school (Austin et al, 2005)
- Planet Health obesity prevention
- diet pills, purging (11-14 yos)
- review (Butryn Wadden, 2005)
- minimal risk, psychological improvement
22ED prevention - unanswered issues
- what age to start?
- primary school, high school, college?
- who should deliver?
- specialist, school/college staff, peer-led?
- criteria for success?
- dieting, body image, ED symptoms, service use?
- why is there so little coordinated evaluated 1
or 2 prevention in the UK?