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Anorexia nervosa is a characterised disorder which forms part of the wider spectrum of eating disorders. It is a common pathology, particularly in adolescence, with a complex, severe prognosis in both somatic and psychiatric terms, and significant psychosocial consequences, particularly for family relationships.
The treatment of anorexia requires a multidisciplinary team of specialists who can offer individual and family-based approaches. International recommendations highlight the encouraging results of family therapy in the treatment of anorexia nervosa in adolescence. Various types of family approach exist, including "Family Based Treatments", which are a specific but highly effective approach, particularly widespread in the United States. Multifamily therapy (MFT), which involves bringing several families together to address the problem of anorexia, has proved effective for several years now.
Since January 2019, multifamily therapy has been offered to adolescents aged 12 to 18 who are being followed at the Maison de Solenn-Maison des Adolescents at Cochin hospital, for anorexia nervosa, as well as their families.
Each group brings together 5 to 7 families and comprises 10 3-hour sessions, with 3 weeks between each session. 2 groups are offered per year. Multi-family therapy therefore involves 10 to 14 families per year. It complements the other approaches available in the department.
To be able to describe the therapeutic processes at work in multifamily groups in order to be able to better describe our therapeutic device and envisage possible modifications. These processes would be broken down into four areas: MFT and its effects on the anorexic symptom, MFT and its effects on the family, MFT as group therapy and ways of improving the MFT system.
Full description
Anorexia nervosa is a characterised disorder which forms part of the wider spectrum of eating disorders. It is a common pathology, particularly in adolescence, with a complex, severe prognosis in both somatic and psychiatric terms, and significant psychosocial consequences, particularly for family relationships.
The treatment of anorexia requires a multidisciplinary team of specialists who can offer individual and family-based approaches. International recommendations highlight the encouraging results of family therapy in the treatment of anorexia nervosa. Various types of family approach exist, including "Family Based Treatments", which are a specific but highly effective approach, particularly widespread in the United States. Multifamily therapy (MFT), which involves bringing several families together to address the problem of anorexia, has proved effective for several years now.
Since January 2019, multifamily therapy has been offered to adolescents aged 12 to 18 who are being followed at the Maison de Solenn-Maison des Adolescents at Cochin Hospital for anorexia nervosa, as well as their families.
Each group brings together 5 to 7 families and comprises 10 3-hour sessions, with 3 weeks between each session. 2 groups are offered per year. Multi-family therapy therefore involves 10 to 14 families per year. It complements the other approaches available in the department.
Primary objective:
To be able to describe the therapeutic processes at work in these multifamily groups in order to be able to better describe our therapeutic device and envisage possible modifications. These processes would be broken down into four areas: MFT and its effects on the anorexic symptom, MFT and its effects on the family, MFT as a group therapy and ways of improving the MFT system.
Secondary objectives:
The study is therefore being proposed to all the families who have taken part in the multifamily therapy for anorexia nervosa, i.e. the adolescents being followed, their parents and siblings.
The investigators propose to use a qualitative methodology aimed at collecting the experiences of patients suffering from anorexia nervosa, their parents and their siblings, using alternately, depending on the group, data collection by focus group or by individual semi-structured interview according to a semi-structured interview guide specifically designed by the research team. The data was collected 4 to 6 months after the tenth and final session of the multifamily group.
The theoretical framework is qualitative and no statistical comparison is expected.
The investigators chose to use Interpretative Phenomenological Analysis (IPA) to study the meaning that the subject constructs from lived experiences. IPA is a recognised method of content analysis, particularly in health psychology.
Approximately 3 months after the end of a multifamily group on anorexia nervosa, the investigators will contact the families by telephone or e-mail to invite the families to take part in research interviews which will take place 4 to 6 months after the tenth and last session of the multifamily group in which the family took part.
The investigators will arrange to meet the families in the department on the same day to carry out an information interview, collect non-oppositions, interviews to collect socio-demographic data and then individual semi-structured interviews or focus groups (depending on staff availability).
The qualitative analysis of our research concerns the thematic analysis of the participants' discourse (adolescent patients, parents and siblings of these adolescents), so the main evaluation criterion concerns the extraction of sufficiently rich material from the discourse to carry out this analysis.
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Inclusion criteria
Families who have taken part in a multifamily group on anorexia nervosa, i.e. :
It will be possible to include in the study a parent or sibling whose adolescent did not wish to take part in the research but who participated in the MFT group.
Exclusion criteria
138 participants in 1 patient group
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Central trial contact
Salomé Grandclerc, MD; Marie Benhammani-Godard
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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