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| Name | Class |
|---|---|
| Canadian Institutes of Health Research (CIHR) | OTHER_GOV |
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Eating disorders are amongst the most understudied illnesses affecting young women in Canada. Further, mortality rates are amongst the highest of all psychiatric illnesses. Despite their high prevalence and mortality rates, research into adolescent eating disorders is underfunded in Canada. In addition to the problem of research underfunding, healthcare system underfunding exists - creating long waiting lists and fragmented care for children and youth with eating disorders. More efficient treatments are urgently needed to reduce wait times and provide expedited care to adolescents on eating disorder waitlists. The current study aims to assess whether implementing a virtual parent-lead therapy, Guided Self Help Family-Based Therapy (GSH FBT) might alleviate wait times for eating disorder services and also reduce eating disorder symptomatology in young people with anorexia nervosa. This study also aims to determine the experiences of both families and medical teams of GSH FBT implementation as an intervention.
The most widely used evidence-based treatment for children and adolescents with eating disorders is Family-Based Treatment (FBT). Similarly, Guided Self-Help FBT (GSH FBT) is a virtual treatment, adapted using FBT principles, that involves a therapist "coach" and a video platform for parents. Therapeutic challenges such as treatment fidelity could be partially mitigated with a model, such as GSH FBT, in which essential material is delivered by video or written material, standardizing the treatment and ensuring that key components are delivered. Given the surging wait list times for adolescent eating disorder treatment, GSH FBT is emerging as a promising, more efficient alternative to longer-term FBT and FBT-V. This study is aimed at examining the implementation of GSH FBT for pediatric patients with eating disorders across nine provinces in Canada using a mixed methods design. To implement this new model of care, the investigators will use implementation teams at each site along with GSH FBT provider training and consultation. The investigators will evaluate the implementation approach using qualitative and quantitative methods including fidelity assessments, examination of wait times, patient, family, and provider outcomes, as well as the overall experience of the implementation of the intervention. Experience of implementation will be assessed using qualitative measures such as semi-structured interviews and focus groups.
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| Label | Type | Description | Intervention Names |
|---|---|---|---|
| Parents who have a child with anorexia nervosa | Experimental | Each participant will receive a series of pre-recorded videos, an electric scale, and a therapy manual ("Help Your Teenager Beat an Eating Disorder"). This will include content on empowering parents to renourish their child and interrupt binge/purge behaviors. |
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| Name | Type | Description | Arm Group Labels | Other Names |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Guided Self Help Family Based Therapy (GSH FBT) | Behavioral | Each family will participate in ten virtual sessions of GSH FBT with a trained GSH practitioner local to their provincial study site. Parents will meet their coach for a 60-minute onboarding session where the parents/caregivers are familiarized with the video platform used in treatment. Then, the treatment consists of ten virtual 20-minute sessions over 6 months. In GSH FBT, the parents weigh the adolescent patient prior to the session, on the same day as the session, and report the weight to the coach. Throughout treatment, parents have access to an online platform with a series of videos that outline the core components of FBT: the urgency to act, parental empowerment, medical complications, strategies to use during and after mealtime, and how to externalize the illness. In line with GSH approaches, coach-therapists direct parents to watch or review videos and text content rather than directly affecting behavioral change. |
| Measure | Description | Time Frame |
|---|---|---|
| Implementation success at participating sites, as measured by fidelity to GSH FBT model | Fidelity of therapists will be measured via administration of a self-reporting fidelity questionnaire piloted in a previous GSH FBT feasibility study. This questionnaire includes nine yes/no questions that gauge whether the therapist was adherent to GSH FBT principles: 1) ensuring only parents are present; 2) ensuring the adolescent is not present; 3) asking parents questions/comments about course materials; 4) avoiding direct orchestration of behavioural change; 5) referencing course materials during the session; 6) focusing the session on treatment; 7) assigning homework appropriately; and 8) & 9) verifying session length. Videos will also be monitored regularly for fidelity via expert review. | Immediately after each session throughout the 10-week protocol |
| Measure | Description | Time Frame |
|---|---|---|
| Changes in severity of eating disorder symptoms | Changes in severity of eating disorder symptoms will be assessed using the Eating Disorder Examination Questionnaire (EDEQ), a 28-item standardized questionnaire that measures the severity of symptoms of eating disorders. The EDEQ is scored using a 7-point, forced-choice rating scale (0-6) with scores of 4 or higher indicative of clinical range and severity of the illness. |
| Measure | Description | Time Frame |
|---|---|---|
| The experience of parents/families participating in GSH FBT treatment | Semi-structured interviews will be used to elicit qualitative descriptions of experiences of each family participating in GSH FBT treatment. | Interviews with families will be scheduled within two weeks of their provider notifying us that their final treatment session has occurred. |
Inclusion Criteria:
Exclusion Criteria:
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| Name | Role | Phone | Extension | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Jennifer Couturier, MSc, MD | Contact | 905-521-2100 | 76008 | coutur@mcmaster.ca |
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| Facility | Status | City | State | ZIP | Country | Contacts |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| McMaster University | Recruiting | Hamilton | Ontario | L8S 4L8 | Canada |
| PubMed Identifier | Type | Citation | Retractions |
|---|---|---|---|
| 41199206 | Derived | Couturier J, Smith J, Nicula M, Nella E, Yanover T, Agostino H, Annema S, Boman J, Bond J, Coelho JS, Coolen AM, Datta N, Dimitropoulos G, Ford C, Isserlin L, Johnson N, Jones S, Katzman D, Kelly B, Keshen A, Kimber M, Kumar S, Kurji A, Lacroix E, Markland A, Matheson B, McVey G, McQuillan B, Norris M, Obeid N, Phillips S, Preskow W, Rodrigues A, Smith S, Soroka C, Spettigue W, Webb C, Wournell J, Lock JD. National implementation of guided self-help family-based treatment for youth with eating disorders: a study protocol. BMC Psychiatry. 2025 Nov 6;25(1):1066. doi: 10.1186/s12888-025-07545-1. |
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| ID | Term |
|---|---|
| D001068 | Feeding and Eating Disorders |
| D000856 | Anorexia Nervosa |
| D001523 | Mental Disorders |
| ID | Term |
|---|---|
| D012817 | Signs and Symptoms, Digestive |
| D012816 | Signs and Symptoms |
| D013568 | Pathological Conditions, Signs and Symptoms |
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| at the baseline (week 0) and at the end of treatment (24 weeks) |
| Changes in wait times as result of implementation approach | Changes in wait time for service will be assessed by asking site administrators to provide wait time for service (in days) and an estimate of number of adolescents waiting for eating disorder services. | at the baseline (week 0) and at the end of treatment (24 weeks) |
| Changes in severity of depressive symptoms | Changes in severity of depressive symptoms will be assessed using the Beck Depression Inventory (BDI), a 21-item questionnaire used to measure the severity of depressive symptoms. Minimum score is 0, maximum score is 63. | at the baseline (week 0) and at the end of treatment (24 weeks) |
| Changes in anxiety symptoms | Changes in severity of anxiety symptoms will be assessed using the Beck Anxiety Inventory (BAI), a 21-item questionnaire used to measure the severity of anxiety symptoms. Minimum score is 0, maximum score is 63. | at the baseline (week 0) and at the end of treatment (24 weeks) |
| Changes in obsessional thinking and compulsive behaviours (linked to eating disorder symptomatology) | Changes in severity of obsessional thinking and compulsive behaviours (linked to eating disorder symptomatology) will be assessed using the Yale-Brown-Cornell Eating Disorder Scale (YBC-EDS), It includes a comprehensive checklist of 21 preoccupations and 44 rituals related to food, eating, weight, shape, and appearance. Each item is rated on a scale from 0 to 4, with 0 indicating no symptoms and 4 indicating very severe symptoms. The total score is the sum of these individual ratings. Therefore, the minimum possible score is 0 (indicating no symptoms), and the maximum possible score is 260 (indicating the most severe symptoms). | at the baseline (week 0) and at the end of treatment (24 weeks) |
| Changes in obsessional thinking and compulsive behaviours | Changes in severity of obsessional thinking and compulsive behaviours will be assessed using the Yale-Brown Obsessive-Compulsive Scale (Y-BOCS-II), a self-report questionnaire assessing obsessions and compulsions separately from eating disorder symptomatology, will also be used to assess this outcome. The total score ranges from 0 (least severe) to 50 (most severe). | at the baseline (week 0) and at the end of treatment (24 weeks) |
| Changes in parental self-efficacy | Changes in parental self-efficacy will be assessed using the "Parents versus Eating Disorder Scale" (PvED), a 7-item measure assessing parental self-efficacy related to re-feeding their child with an eating disorder. Scores range from 7 (least severe) to 35 (most severe). | at the baseline (week 0) and at the end of treatment (24 weeks) |
| Provider's readiness for change | Provider individual readiness for change will be evaluated using the Brief Individual Readiness for Change Scale (BIRCS), administered to therapist-coaches. Minimum score is 0, maximum score is 20. | at the baseline (week 0) and at the end of treatment (24 weeks) |
| Providers' attitudes towards evidence-based practice | Provider attitudes about evidence-based practice will be assessed using the Evidence Based Practice Attitudes Scale (EBPAS), administered to therapist-coaches. Minimum score for each subscale is 0, maximum score for each subscale is 4. | at the baseline (week 0) and at the end of treatment (24 weeks) |
| Provider's confidence in ability to deliver intervention | Confidence related to the intervention will be assessed by administering an adapted version of the Perceived Attributes of the Principles of Effectiveness Scale (MPAQ) to therapist-coaches. The minimum score is 18, the maximum score is 90. | at the baseline (week 0) and at the end of treatment (24 weeks) |
| Implementation teams' experiences of GSH FBT treatment and its implementation | Semi-structured focus groups with each site's implementation team will be used to elicit qualitative descriptions of their experiences of GSH FBT treatment and implementation. | Focus groups with a site will occur within two weeks of when the investigators have been notified that all GSH FBT sessions have been completed at the site. |