Institute of Psychiatry, Psychology and Neuroscience (IoPPN), King's College London, London, UK.
Maudsley Centre for Child and Adolescent Eating Disorders (MCCAED), South London and Maudsley NHS Foundation Trust, London, UK.
Int J Eat Disord. 2021 Dec;54(12):2095-2120. doi: 10.1002/eat.23616. Epub 2021 Oct 20.
This study reviewed the quantitative and qualitative evidence-base for multi-family therapy (MFT) for eating disorders regarding change in physical and psychological symptoms, broader individual and family factors, and the experience of treatment.
A systematic scoping review was conducted. Four databases (PsycInfo, Medline, Embase, CENTRAL) and five grey literature databases were searched on 24th June 2021 for relevant peer-reviewed journal articles, book chapters, and dissertations. No beginning time-point was specified. Only papers that presented quantitative or qualitative data were included. No restrictions on age or diagnosis were imposed. Studies were first mapped by study design, participant age, and treatment setting, then narratively synthesized.
Outcomes for 714 people who received MFT across 27 studies (one mixed-method, 17 quantitative and nine qualitative) were synthesized. MFT is associated with improvements in eating disorder symptomatology and weight gain for those who are underweight. It is also associated with improvements in other individual and family factors including comorbidities, self-esteem, quality of life, and some aspects of the experience of caregiving, although these findings are more mixed. MFT is generally experienced as both helpful and challenging due to the content addressed and intensive group process.
MFT is associated with significant improvements in eating disorder symptoms across the lifespan and improvement in broader individual and family factors. The evidence base is small and studies are generally underpowered. Larger, higher-quality studies are needed, as is research investigating the unique contribution of MFT on outcomes, given it is typically an adjunctive treatment.
本研究回顾了多家庭治疗(MFT)在饮食障碍方面的定量和定性证据基础,包括身体和心理症状、更广泛的个体和家庭因素以及治疗体验的变化。
进行了系统的范围审查。于 2021 年 6 月 24 日在四个数据库(PsycInfo、Medline、Embase、CENTRAL)和五个灰色文献数据库中搜索了相关同行评审的期刊文章、书籍章节和论文,没有指定开始时间点。仅纳入了提供定量或定性数据的论文。对年龄或诊断没有限制。首先按研究设计、参与者年龄和治疗环境对研究进行映射,然后进行叙述性综合。
综合了 27 项研究(1 项混合方法研究、17 项定量研究和 9 项定性研究)中 714 名接受 MFT 治疗的人的结果。对于体重不足的人,MFT 与饮食障碍症状的改善和体重增加有关。它还与其他个体和家庭因素的改善有关,包括合并症、自尊、生活质量和一些照顾体验方面,尽管这些发现更为混杂。MFT 通常被认为是有帮助和具有挑战性的,因为它涉及到的内容和密集的小组过程。
MFT 与整个生命周期中饮食障碍症状的显著改善以及更广泛的个体和家庭因素的改善有关。证据基础较小,且研究通常缺乏效力。需要更大、更高质量的研究,以及研究 MFT 对结果的独特贡献的研究,因为它通常是一种辅助治疗。