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Eating disorders are amongst the most understudied illnesses affecting young women in Canada. Further, mortality rates are amongst the highest of all psychiatric illnesses. Despite their high prevalence and mortality rates, research into adolescent eating disorders is underfunded in Canada. In addition to the problem of research underfunding, healthcare system underfunding exists - creating long waiting lists and fragmented care for children and youth with eating disorders. More efficient treatments are urgently needed to reduce wait times and provide expedited care to adolescents on eating disorder waitlists. The current study aims to assess whether implementing a virtual parent-lead therapy, Guided Self Help Family-Based Therapy (GSH FBT) might alleviate wait times for eating disorder services and also reduce eating disorder symptomatology in young people with anorexia nervosa. This study also aims to determine the experiences of both families and medical teams of GSH FBT implementation as an intervention.
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The most widely used evidence-based treatment for children and adolescents with eating disorders is Family-Based Treatment (FBT). Similarly, Guided Self-Help FBT (GSH FBT) is a virtual treatment, adapted using FBT principles, that involves a therapist "coach" and a video platform for parents. Therapeutic challenges such as treatment fidelity could be partially mitigated with a model, such as GSH FBT, in which essential material is delivered by video or written material, standardizing the treatment and ensuring that key components are delivered. Given the surging wait list times for adolescent eating disorder treatment, GSH FBT is emerging as a promising, more efficient alternative to longer-term FBT and FBT-V. This study is aimed at examining the implementation of GSH FBT for pediatric patients with eating disorders across nine provinces in Canada using a mixed methods design. To implement this new model of care, the investigators will use implementation teams at each site along with GSH FBT provider training and consultation. The investigators will evaluate the implementation approach using qualitative and quantitative methods including fidelity assessments, examination of wait times, patient, family, and provider outcomes, as well as the overall experience of the implementation of the intervention. Experience of implementation will be assessed using qualitative measures such as semi-structured interviews and focus groups.
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90 participants in 1 patient group
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Jennifer Couturier, MSc, MD
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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