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Diabetes Body Project: Acute Effects of an Eating Disorder Prevention Program for Young Women With Type 1 Diabetes. A Multinational Randomized Controlled Trial

Mareille H.C.L. Hennekes, Severina Haugvik, Maartje de Wit, Elena Toschi, C. Desjardins, Torild Skrivarhaug, Knut Dahl‐Jørgensen, Eric Stice, Line Wisting

2024Diabetes Care12 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: Young women with type 1 diabetes are at risk to develop eating disorders (ED). We evaluated a novel ED prevention program in a multinational randomized controlled trial. RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODS: Women (14-35 years old) with type 1 diabetes were randomized to virtual Diabetes Body Project groups or educational control. Outcomes were assessed at pretest and posttest (1-2 weeks after intervention). RESULTS: Compared with educational controls (n = 146), participants in the Diabetes Body Project (n = 147) showed significant improvements (all P < 0.05), with small Cohen's d effect sizes for ED symptoms (d = -0.30, 95% CI -0.06, -0.69) (primary outcome), diabetes distress (d = -0.42), quality of life (d = 0.39) and dietary restraint (d = -0.31), and medium effect sizes for diabetes-specific disordered eating behaviors (d = -0.70), body dissatisfaction (d = -0.59), and pursuit of thin appearance ideal (d = -0.56). CONCLUSIONS: The Diabetes Body Project produced significantly larger acute effects with small to medium effect sizes compared with educational controls and has potential for broad implementation.

Topics & Concepts

MedicineRandomized controlled trialType 2 diabetesDiabetes mellitusMultinational corporationEating disordersPhysical therapyInternal medicinePsychiatryEndocrinologyLawPolitical scienceDiabetes Management and ResearchEating Disorders and BehaviorsDiabetes Management and Education
Diabetes Body Project: Acute Effects of an Eating Disorder Prevention Program for Young Women With Type 1 Diabetes. A Multinational Randomized Controlled Trial | Litcius