A pilot multiple‐baseline study of a mobile cognitive behavioral therapy for the treatment of eating disorders in university students

Author:

Bohrer Brittany K.1ORCID,Chen Yiyang2,Christensen Kara A.3ORCID,Forbush Kelsie T.2ORCID,Thomeczek Marianna L.2,Richson Brianne N.2ORCID,Chapa Danielle A. N.2ORCID,Jarmolowicz David P.2,Gould Sara R.4,Negi Sonakshi2,Perko Victoria L.5,Morgan Robert William2

Affiliation:

1. Department of Psychiatry University of California San Diego Health Eating Disorders Center for Treatment and Research San Diego California USA

2. Department of Psychology University of Kansas Lawrence Kansas USA

3. Department of Psychology University of Nevada, Las Vegas Las Vegas Nevada USA

4. Children's Mercy Hospital Kansas City Missouri USA

5. University of New Mexico Health Science Center Albuquerque New Mexico USA

Abstract

AbstractObjectiveEating disorders (EDs) are serious psychiatric disorders associated with substantial morbidity and mortality that are prevalent among university students. Because many students do not receive treatment due to lack of access on university campuses, mobile‐health (mHealth) adaptations of evidence‐based treatments represent an opportunity to increase treatment accessibility and engagement. The purpose of this study was to test the initial efficacy of Building Healthy Eating and Self‐Esteem Together for University Students (BEST‐U), which is a 10‐week mHealth self‐guided cognitive‐behavioral therapy (CBT‐gsh) app that is paired with a brief 25–30‐min weekly telehealth coaching, for reducing ED psychopathology in university students.MethodA non‐concurrent multiple‐baseline design (N = 8) was used to test the efficacy of BEST‐U for reducing total ED psychopathology (primary outcome), ED‐related behaviors and cognitions (secondary outcomes), and ED‐related clinical impairment (secondary outcome). Data were examined using visual analysis and Tau‐BC effect‐size calculations.ResultsBEST‐U significantly reduced total ED psychopathology and binge eating, excessive exercise, and restriction (effect sizes ranged from −0.39 to −0.92). Although body dissatisfaction decreased, it was not significant. There were insufficient numbers of participants engaging in purging to evaluate purging outcomes. Clinical impairment significantly reduced from pre‐to‐post‐treatment.DiscussionThe current study provided initial evidence that BEST‐U is a potentially efficacious treatment for reducing ED symptoms and ED‐related clinical impairment. Although larger‐scale randomized controlled trials are needed, BEST‐U may represent an innovative, scalable tool that could reach greater numbers of underserved university students than traditional intervention‐delivery models.Public SignificanceUsing a single‐case experimental design, we found evidence for the initial efficacy of a mobile guided‐self‐help cognitive‐behavioral therapy program for university students with non‐low weight binge‐spectrum eating disorders. Participants reported significant reductions in ED symptoms and impairment after completion of the 10‐week program. Guided self‐help programs show promise for filling an important need for treatment among university students with an ED.

Funder

National Center for Advancing Translational Sciences

National Institute of Mental Health

University of Kansas

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Psychiatry and Mental health

Reference76 articles.

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