Abstract

Motivation to change behavior is seen as an important factor in achieving a better treatment effect in patients with eating disorders (ED). The aim of this systematic review was to assess whether motivational interviewing (MI) and motivational enhancement therapy (MET) might (1) increase motivation to change behavior and (2) improve eating disorder psychopathology (EDP) and body mass index (BMI) in patients with ED. To investigate this, a literature search was conducted on 9 March 2021 on four scientific databases: Cochrane, Embase (Ovid), MEDLINE (PubMed), and PsycInfo (EBSCO). A total of 2647 publications were identified and following a rigorous stepwise procedure to assess titles and abstracts and, thereafter, full texts of relevant publications, 13 studies were included in the data extraction and analyses. A few individual studies (n = 5) found a significant increase in motivation, two a decrease in ED symptoms (n = 2), while none found an effect on BMI. However, the meta-analysis of each outcome found effect sizes near zero, thereby confirming the results of previous narrative reviews that have described a lack of effect of MET/MI on motivation in ED. Since the individual studies differ substantially in design, and the outcomes were inconsistently assessed with regards to instruments and duration, the effect of MET/MI on motivation for behavioral change, ED psychopathology, and BMI is still unclear.

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