A case series of CBT-T in routine clinical practice

Research output: Contribution to journalArticle (Academic Journal)peer-review

6 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

Objective
CBT-T is a relatively new, brief cognitive behavioral therapy eating disorder treatment for non-underweight patients. This study evaluates CBT-T independently from the team that developed the protocol, and examines the relationship between eating disorder duration and CBT-T effectiveness.

Method
A case series design was used, comprising N = 40 adults with bulimia or atypical anorexia type eating disorders. CBT-T was delivered by CBT therapists in a specialist outpatient service. Mixed model analysis examined the interactions between eating disorder duration and change to eating disorder psychopathology and secondary impairment from pre-post treatment. Abstinence, good outcome, and remission rates were also provided.

Results
Intervention effect sizes were large. Treatment completers reported abstinence from binge eating and purging over the final 28-days, and 7-days of treatment at 30.1%, and 73.1%, respectively; 76.9% reported good outcome; and 23.1% reported remission. No relationship between eating disorder duration and treatment effectiveness was found.

Discussion
These findings build on existing evidence supporting provision of CBT-T in routine clinical practice, for patients with eating disorders of any duration. Replication, extension, and RCT will strengthen comparability with other evidence-based approaches.
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)1549-1554
JournalInternational Journal of Eating Disorders
Volume54
Issue number8
Early online date17 Jun 2021
Publication statusPublished - Jun 2021

Research Groups and Themes

  • SoE Centre for Psychological Approaches for Studying Education

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