Journal of Eating Disorders (May 2022)

The effectiveness of a feminist-informed, individualised counselling intervention for the treatment of eating disorders: a case series study

  • Jessica Tone,
  • Belinda Chelius,
  • Yvette D. Miller

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s40337-022-00592-z
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10, no. 1
pp. 1 – 12

Abstract

Read online

Plain English Summary Eating disorders can result from a variety of factors including previous trauma and sociocultural influences. Critical feminist perspectives acknowledge these influences are core contributing factors to the development and maintenance of eating disorder behaviours and postulate the exploration of the eating disorder in relation to these wider factors as crucial to the treatment process. Therefore, treatment interventions that utilise feminist frameworks and approaches that are integrative of a variety of psychological therapies to suit individual needs may be useful to address underlying factors while also managing eating disorder behaviours. However, there have been few experimental studies that have evaluated these interventions. This article aims to address this gap in current eating disorder literature by describing and evaluating the effectiveness of a counselling therapy for eating disorders that employs feminist practice and a variety of psychological therapies. The results indicate that eating disorder symptoms, stress, and mental health recovery improved after 10 sessions of the counselling intervention for a sample of 80 participants receiving eating disorder treatment. The results from this study provide initial evidence for the usefulness of feminist-informed practice and individualised counselling interventions for the treatment of eating disorders.

Keywords