Patient expectations of a new treatment for eating disorders combining guided physical exercise and dietary therapy: An interview study of women participating in a randomised controlled trial at the Norwegian School of Sport Sciences
Permanent lenke
https://hdl.handle.net/10037/16287Dato
2019-04-20Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Forfatter
Pettersen, Gunn; Rosenvinge, Jan H; Skomakerstuen, Tone; Sørdal, Solveig; Mathisen, Therese Fostervold; Sundgot-Borgen, JorunnSammendrag
Design and participants - Semistructured interviews were conducted with six women with BN and four women with BED following a group-based therapy programme. Transcribed interviews were analysed using a text-condensing analytic approach.
Results - The analysis resulted in three main categories, that is, expectations about (1) increased knowledge, (2) symptom changes and (3) therapeutic expertise. The women expected that learning more about nutrition and physical exercise would give them more energy, less fear of food, physical and mental symptoms and a negative body focus. They also expected therapists to be professional and competent, and able to take care of them.
Conclusion - The overall high and positive treatment expectation can, to some extent, reflect enthusiasm about a new and innovative approach to treatment. However, the results also reflect generic and highly adequate outcome expectations, which for the purpose of effectiveness should be incorporated into all treatment efforts at least for patients with eating disorders.