A long-term, large-scale study has found that an Internet-based intervention
program may prevent some high risk, college-age women from developing an eating
disorder (http://www.nimh.nih.gov/publicat/eatingdisorders.cfm).
The study, funded by the National Institutes of Health?s (NIH) National Institute
of Mental Health (NIMH), was published in the August 2006 issue of the Archives
of General Psychiatry.
The researchers conducted a randomized, controlled trial of 480 college-age
women in the San Francisco Bay area and San Diego, Calif., who were identified
in preliminary interviews as being at risk for developing an eating disorder.
The trial included an eight-week, Internet-based, cognitive-behavioral intervention
program called "Student Bodies," which had been shown to be effective in previous
small-scale short-term studies. The intervention aimed to reduce the participants' concerns
about body weight and shape, enhance body image, promote healthy eating and weight
maintenance, and increase knowledge about the risks associated with eating disorders.
The online program included reading and other assignments such as keeping an
online body-image journal. Participants also took part in an online discussion
group, moderated by clinical psychologists. Participants were interviewed immediately
following the end of the online program, and annually for up to three years thereafter
to determine their attitudes toward their weight and shape, and measure the onset
of any eating disorders
"Eating disorders are complex and particularly difficult to treat. In fact,
they have one of the highest mortality rates among all mental disorders," said
NIMH Director Thomas Insel, M.D. "This study shows that innovative intervention
can work, and offers hope to those trying to overcome these illnesses."
Over the course of a lifetime, about 0.5 to 3.7 percent of girls and women will
develop anorexia nervosa, and about 1.1 to 4.2 percent will develop bulimia nervosa.
About 0.5 percent of those with anorexia die each year as a result of their illness,
making it one of the top psychiatric illnesses that lead to death.
Anorexia generally is characterized by a resistance to maintaining a healthy
body weight, an intense fear of gaining weight, and other extreme behaviors that
result in severe weight loss. People with anorexia see themselves as overweight
even when they are dangerously thin. Bulimia generally is characterized by recurrent
episodes of binge eating, followed by self- induced purging behaviors. People
with bulimia often have normal weights, but like those with anorexia, they are
intensely dissatisfied with their bodies. All eating disorders involve multiple
biological, behavioral and social factors that are not well understood.
The intervention appeared to be most successful among overweight women who had
elevated body mass indexes (BMIs) of 25 or more at the start of the program.
In fact, among these women in the intervention group, none developed an eating
disorder after two years, while 11.9 percent of the women with comparable baseline
BMIs in the control group did develop an eating disorder during the same time
frame. BMI is a reliable indicator of a person?s body fat by measuring his or
her weight and height.