Abstract

ObjectiveThe quality of working alliance (WA) is associated with treatment outcomes across several types of psychiatric disorders and psychological interventions. This study examined the role of WA with peer mentors (people with lived experience of illness) and student mentors (graduated psychology students) in a 6‐week, digital, guided self‐help (GSH) intervention for anorexia nervosa.MethodNinety‐nine patients rated weekly, for 6 weeks: (a) eating psychopathology using the short version of the Eating Disorder Examination Questionnaire (EDE‐QS) and (b) WA with a student mentor (n = 14) or a peer mentor (n = 10). WA was assessed by asking patients the extent to which they felt comfortable working with their mentor and the extent to which they agreed with them on the goals for support. WA with mentors and the association with eating psychopathology change were measured on a session‐by‐session basis. The analysis involved a random intercepts cross‐lagged panel model.ResultsWA with peer mentors was slightly higher than WA with students (ES = 0.3). Peer mentors' WA in the previous session was significantly associated with eating psychopathology ratings in the next session. No significant relationship was found between the previous session's EDE‐QS scores and peer mentor alliance in the following session. In the student mentor group, there were no session‐by‐session associations between WA and eating psychopathology. However, greater WA with the student mentor across sessions was associated with less eating psychopathology.DiscussionThese findings suggest that clinical outcomes are in part associated with the characteristics of the mentor delivering guidance in an online GSH for eating disorders.

Highlights

  • Digital therapies have been largely tested in the field of eating disorders for the treatment of bulimia nervosa and binge-eating disorders (Beintner, Jacobi, & Schmidt, 2014; Schlegl, Bürger, Schmidt, Herbst, & Voderholzer, 2015)

  • We examined how working alliance (WA) with the mentors delivering online guidance in the Self-Help and Recovery guide for Eating Disorders (SHARED) trial impacted on eating psychopathology

  • The mean eating psychopathology scores (EDE-Q) and body mass index (BMI) at baseline for participants assigned to peer mentors were 3.90 (SD = 1.22) and 16.14 (SD = 1.46), respectively; while they were 4.12 (SD = 1.04) and 16.02 (SD = 1.45) for patients assigned to student mentors

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Digital therapies have been largely tested in the field of eating disorders for the treatment of bulimia nervosa and binge-eating disorders (Beintner, Jacobi, & Schmidt, 2014; Schlegl, Bürger, Schmidt, Herbst, & Voderholzer, 2015). Recent meta-analytic results demonstrate that the use of GSH in AN is associated with reduced drop-out rates compared to Specialist Supportive Clinical Management or Treatment as usual (TAU) (OR [95% CI] = 0.63[0.41–0.95]), there were only small effects for changes in body mass index (BMI), depression and anxiety (ES of 0.08, À0.07, and À0.03; Albano, Hodsoll, Kan, Lo Coco, & Cardi, 2019). We use data from the Self-Help and Recovery guide for Eating Disorders (SHARED) trial (which was one of the studies included in Albano et al, 2019). The SHARED trial tested the use of a 6-week digital GSH intervention to augment TAU for AN (i.e., RecoveryMANTRA; Cardi et al, 2015)

Methods
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call