Abstract

There are few well-established treatments for adolescent eating disorders, and for those that do exist, remission rates are reported to be between 30 and 40%. There is a need for the development and implementation of novel treatment approaches. Mindfulness approaches have shown improvements in eating disorder-related psychopathology in adults and have been suggested for adolescents. The present review identifies and summarizes studies that have used mindfulness approaches to modify eating behaviors and to treat eating disorders in adolescents. Focused searches were conducted in Embase, Medline, and PsycINFO, and identified articles were checked for relevance. A small number of studies (n = 15) were designated as appropriate for inclusion in the review. These studies were divided into those that focused on the promotion of healthy eating/the prevention of disordered eating (n = 5), those that concentrated on targeted prevention among high risk adolescents (n = 5), and those that focused on clinical eating disordered adolescents (n = 5). Thirteen of the 15 studies reviewed reported at least one positive association between mindfulness treatment techniques and reduced weight/shape concerns, dietary restraint, decreased body mass index (BMI), eating in the absence of hunger (EAH), binge eating, increased willingness to eat novel healthy foods, and reduced eating disorder psychopathology. In summary, incorporating mindfulness to modify eating behaviors in adolescent non-clinical and clinical samples is still in the early stages, with a lack of data showing clear evidence of acceptability and efficacy. Further studies and preferably controlled conditions are warranted.

Highlights

  • Nutrition is critical for healthy childhood and adolescent development [1], yet suggested dietary guidelines are rarely met by youths [2]

  • Non-adherance is associated with a host of negative health effects, and is one of the main factors leading to the increasing prevalence of obesity [3]

  • 15 publications were included in the final review; of these, 13 studies described mindfulness-based and -informed interventions and 2 studies assessed and associated dispositional mindfulness with eating behaviors

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Summary

Introduction

Nutrition is critical for healthy childhood and adolescent development [1], yet suggested dietary guidelines are rarely met by youths [2]. Non-adherance is associated with a host of negative health effects, and is one of the main factors leading to the increasing prevalence of obesity [3]. Prevalence rates among American children ages 2 to 5 years has increased from 11% in 1999 to 14% in 2016 [3], and more than one third of American adolescents are considered overweight or obese [4]. Weight-related bullying and negative conversations about body-related issues have been found to significantly impact adolescents’ body satisfaction and eating behaviors, and have been associated with increased risk for the development of eating disorders [7]

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