Department of Pediatrics, Penn State College of Medicine, Hershey, Pennsylvania, USA.
Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Health, Penn State College of Medicine, Hershey, Pennsylvania, USA.
Int J Eat Disord. 2022 Nov;55(11):1621-1626. doi: 10.1002/eat.23806. Epub 2022 Sep 1.
This study explored the preliminary effectiveness of a partial hospitalization program (PHP) for children/adolescents with avoidant/restrictive food intake disorder (ARFID). We evaluated how ARFID symptoms changed from admission to discharge, and collected follow-up data on symptoms and outpatient care following PHP discharge.
Twenty-two children/adolescents with ARFID (77.3% White, 63.6% female) completed measures assessing ARFID symptomatology at admission and discharge from a PHP for eating disorders. Six months and twelve months following their discharge, participants were contacted to complete study measures again and take part in an interview assessing follow-up care.
Paired samples t tests indicated that participants demonstrated increases in weight and decreases in ARFID symptomatology from admission to discharge with medium to large effects. All participants reported receiving some form of outpatient treatment following discharge, with the type of outpatient services varying across participants. Data from the 86% of participants who completed the six-month follow-up and 50% who completed the twelve-month follow-up suggest that participants generally maintained treatment gains following PHP discharge.
Participants experienced symptom improvements from admission to discharge and appeared to maintain these gains after discharge. These results provide preliminary evidence that PHPs are an effective treatment option for children and adolescents with ARFID.
This study provides preliminary evidence that intensive, evidence-based PHPs are effective in treating ARFID. Our findings suggest that children and adolescents with ARFID who receive flexible, cognitive-behavioral, family-centered treatment in a PHP for EDs experience improvements in weight and ARFID symptomatology from admission to discharge. Despite receiving variable and nonstandardized outpatient treatment, individuals with ARFID appear to maintain treatment gains 6 and 12 months after discharge in a PHP.
本研究探讨了针对回避/限制型进食障碍(ARFID)儿童/青少年的部分住院治疗计划(PHP)的初步疗效。我们评估了 ARFID 症状从入院到出院的变化,并收集了 PHP 出院后症状和门诊治疗的随访数据。
22 名 ARFID 儿童/青少年(77.3%为白人,63.6%为女性)完成了评估进食障碍 PHP 入院和出院时 ARFID 症状的量表。在他们出院后 6 个月和 12 个月,联系参与者再次完成研究量表,并参与评估门诊治疗的访谈。
配对样本 t 检验表明,参与者在入院到出院期间表现出体重增加和 ARFID 症状减少,具有中等至较大的影响。所有参与者报告在出院后接受了某种形式的门诊治疗,不同参与者的门诊服务类型不同。完成 6 个月随访的 86%和完成 12 个月随访的 50%的参与者的数据表明,参与者在 PHP 出院后通常保持治疗效果。
参与者在入院到出院期间症状有所改善,并且在出院后似乎保持了这些改善。这些结果初步证明了 PHP 是 ARFID 儿童和青少年的有效治疗选择。
本研究提供了初步证据,表明强化、基于证据的 PHP 对 ARFID 有效。我们的发现表明,在 ED 中接受灵活、认知行为、以家庭为中心的治疗的 ARFID 儿童和青少年在入院到出院期间,体重和 ARFID 症状均有改善。尽管接受了不同和非标准化的门诊治疗,但 ARFID 患者在 PHP 出院后 6 个月和 12 个月时似乎保持了治疗效果。