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Augmentative Approaches in Family‐Based Treatment for Adolescents with Restrictive Eating Disorders: A Systematic Review
Authors
Agras
American Psychiatric Association
+77 more
American Psychiatric Association
Anderson
Attia
Bean
Brown
Couturier
Couturier
Couturier
Dare
Dare
DeJong
Depestele
Doyle
Doyle
Eisler
Eisler
Eisler
Eisler
Eisler
Eisler
Engman-Bredvik
Fairburn
Fairburn
Fassino
Franko
Friedman
Gabel
Garner
Gelin
Girz
Goldfield
Henderson
Hildebrandt
Hollesen
Honig
Hoste
Hurst
Hurst
Johnston
Jones
Le Grange
Le Grange
Le Grange
Le Grange
Le Grange
Le Grange
Lock
Lock
Lock
Lock
Lock
Lock
Lock
Loeb
Loeb
Madden
Marzola
Mehl
Moher
Murray
Murray
Ornstein
Paulson-Karlsson
Pretorius
Rhodes
Rienecke
Robinson
Robinson
Rockwell
Salaminiou
Scholz
Smolak
Steinhausen
Strober
Treasure
Voriadaki
Wallis
Publication date
1 March 2018
Publisher
'Wiley'
Doi
Cite
Abstract
ObjectiveTo systematically review the literature reporting outcomes of augmentative family‐based treatment (FBT) interventions for adolescents with restrictive eating disorders (EDs).MethodArticles were identified through a systematic search of five electronic databases (PsycINFO, MEDLINE, EMBASE, CINAHL, Cochrane Database).ResultsThirty articles were included, reporting on FBT augmentations featuring adjunctive treatment components, modified treatment structure and/or content with adherence to FBT principles, and adaptations allowing FBT delivery in different settings. All reported significant improvements in weight and/or ED symptoms at end‐of‐treatment, although few compared augmentative and standard FBT interventions and good quality follow‐up data was generally lacking.ConclusionsThere is early evidence for the effectiveness of augmentative FBT‐based approaches in facilitating weight and/or ED symptom improvements for adolescents with restrictive EDs. There remains a lack of robust evidence demonstrating superior effects of such approaches over standard FBT, and further controlled studies are required to expand on the current evidence. Copyright © 2017 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd and Eating Disorders Association.Peer Reviewedhttps://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/142429/1/erv2577.pdfhttps://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/142429/2/erv2577_am.pd
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Last time updated on 03/06/2019
Crossref
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info:doi/10.1002%2Ferv.2577
Last time updated on 03/11/2020