Comparative efficacy of spirituality, cognitive, and emotional support groups for treating eating disorder inpatients.

Abstract:

:Spiritual interventions are rarely used in contemporary treatment programs and little empirical evidence is available concerning their effectiveness. The purpose of the present study was to evaluate the effectiveness of a spiritual group intervention for eating disorder inpatients. We compared the effectiveness of a Spirituality group with Cognitive and Emotional Support groups using a randomized, control group design. Participants were 122 women receiving inpatient eating disorder treatment. Patients in the Spirituality group tended to score significantly lower on psychological disturbance and eating disorder symptoms at the conclusion of treatment compared to patients in the other groups, and higher on spiritual well-being. On weekly outcome measures, patients in the Spirituality group improved significantly more quickly during the first four weeks of treatment. This study provides preliminary evidence that attending to eating disorder patients' spiritual growth and well-being during inpatient treatment may help reduce depression and anxiety, relationship distress, social role conflict, and eating disorder symptoms.

journal_name

Eat Disord

journal_title

Eating disorders

authors

Richards PS,Berrett ME,Hardman RK,Eggett DL

doi

10.1080/10640260600952548

subject

Has Abstract

pub_date

2006-10-01 00:00:00

pages

401-15

issue

5

eissn

1064-0266

issn

1532-530X

pii

R0415H71TK16G514

journal_volume

14

pub_type

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