2017
DOI: 10.1002/erv.2577
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Augmentative Approaches in Family‐Based Treatment for Adolescents with Restrictive Eating Disorders: A Systematic Review

Abstract: There is early evidence for the effectiveness of augmentative FBT-based approaches in facilitating weight and/or ED symptom improvements for adolescents with restrictive EDs. There remains a lack of robust evidence demonstrating superior effects of such approaches over standard FBT, and further controlled studies are required to expand on the current evidence. Copyright © 2017 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd and Eating Disorders Association.

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Cited by 29 publications
(32 citation statements)
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“…In this article we have identified a number of significant, commonly occurring problems in adolescent AN and described how the context, structure, and interventions of FBT can be used to successfully address many of them without introducing new content or augmentative treatments that to date have not been found systematically beneficial (83). Careful reading, accredited training, adequate supervision, and experience using manualized FBT would likely decrease concerns about how FBT helps with the full range of problems associated with adolescent AN.…”
Section: Concluding Commentmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…In this article we have identified a number of significant, commonly occurring problems in adolescent AN and described how the context, structure, and interventions of FBT can be used to successfully address many of them without introducing new content or augmentative treatments that to date have not been found systematically beneficial (83). Careful reading, accredited training, adequate supervision, and experience using manualized FBT would likely decrease concerns about how FBT helps with the full range of problems associated with adolescent AN.…”
Section: Concluding Commentmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…It may be particularly important to examine the relative effect of FBT compared to Systemic Family Therapy for adolescents with comorbid obsessive compulsive disorder as this was identified post hoc as a moderator favoring Systemic Family Therapy and should be confirmed (8). Furthermore, while FBT is effective for many, there is considerable room for improvement in outcomes and strategies to improve or augment FBT developed and tested (83). Careful study of the mechanisms mediating response to FBT, such as emotion regulation, trait characteristics, and social competence as well as parent factors as outlined above, may give clues to possible enhancements that would increase the proportion of patients responding to the intervention.…”
Section: Concluding Commentmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Given the utility of FBT, treatment programs utilizing higher levels of care (e.g., partial hospitalization programs [PHP]), have integrated FBT strategies into treatment protocols (Richards, Subar, Touyz, & Rhodes, ). Although all aspects of manualized FBT cannot be translated to a PHP, family‐based PHPs attempt to reproduce core FBT tenets (e.g., focusing on parental empowerment and discouraging reliance on the program for refeeding; see Hoste, ).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In one way or another all these approaches facilitate emotionally laden communication between the young person and their parents. There is currently insufficient data to judge the therapeutic effectiveness of these approaches (Richards et al, 2018). We present here the case of an adolescent girl who remained dependent on parental supervision despite weight recovery and presented with disabling OCD after treatment.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In one way or another all these approaches facilitate emotionally laden communication between the young person and their parents. There is currently insufficient data to judge the therapeutic effectiveness of these approaches (Richards et al., ).…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%