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Managing Our Relationship With Food and Eating

Not Applicable
Completed
Conditions
Mental Health Wellness 1
Eating Behavior
Stress, Psychological
Eating Habit
Interventions
Behavioral: Trauma Informed Yoga
Behavioral: Trauma Informed Psychotherapy
Registration Number
NCT04797689
Lead Sponsor
University of Lethbridge
Brief Summary

There is a need for population-level intervention research to address the impacts of the COVID-19 pandemic on disordered eating and unhealthy eating behaviours. Systematic reviews have demonstrated that psychotherapy and yoga can help to reduce binge eating and disordered eating habits, however, these interventions were tested in person. Studies examining the effectiveness of these interventions in an online, group-based format are warranted. In 2019, the investigators launched a RCT to test gender-stratified group interventions to address mental health and addictive behaviours among community-based adults in southern Alberta. The investigators implemented this intervention with more than 200 adults in person before this study was paused due to COVID-19; In 2020, the investigators adapted this intervention for online delivery to 200 community-dwelling women across Alberta. The most recent iteration of this study indicated the participants were particularly concerned about their relationship with food and how they were engaging in different eating behaviours to cope with the stress of COVID-19.

Detailed Description

The primary objective of this project is to adapt two existing mental health and substance use interventions and RCT for online delivery to address unhealthy eating behaviours and a negative relationship with food for women within the context of COVID-19. The second objective is to test if an online group body-oriented intervention (trauma-sensitive yoga) that has been designed to increase awareness of physical sensations, is superior to an online group verbal narrative intervention (mental wellness talking circle), and to control group. The investigators theorize that the body-oriented intervention may offer the opportunity to reprogram automatic physiologic hyperarousal in response to COVID-19 triggers and increase positive body awareness, and mindful attention to the ways in which habitual self-protective behaviours, like unhealthy eating behaviours, may be impacting health. The third objective is to examine the impacts of the interventions on adults with pre-existing mental health and disordered eating issues, and those with previous experiences that may make them more susceptible to these problems during COVID-19. The investigators will track other supports they engage in during the study and the perceived impacts of these supports on their outcomes with the goal of shedding light on how to best match COVID-19 related services to adults who need them the most.

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
COMPLETED
Sex
Female
Target Recruitment
158
Inclusion Criteria
  • Women between 18-75 years living in Alberta, Canada
  • Need to have reliable access to the internet, a device with a webcam for the next 2 months
  • Need to self-identify that they are currently struggling with at least one of: stress eating, alcohol use, drug use, tobacco use, or gambling during the pandemic
Exclusion Criteria
  • Non-community dwelling
  • Not currently residing in Alberta, Canada

Study & Design

Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Study Design
PARALLEL
Arm && Interventions
GroupInterventionDescription
Trauma Informed YogaTrauma Informed YogaParticipants will receive 12 x 60 min group-based yoga sessions, delivered synchronously over Zoom.
Trauma Informed PsychotherapyTrauma Informed PsychotherapyParticipants will receive 12 x 120 min group-based psychotherapy sessions, delivered synchronously over Zoom.
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Changes in Intuitive Eating BehavioursBaseline, Mid-point (6 weeks), Post-Intervention (12 weeks)

Intuitive eating behaviours will be assessed using the 23-item The Intuitive Eating Scale-2 (IES-2). Items are measured on a 5-point Likert, with options ranging from "Strongly Disagree" to "Strongly Agree". Among women, the IES-2 has good internal consistency (α = 0.87), good convergent validity with the original IES (r = 0.87), and strong test-retest reliability (r = 0.88).

Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Changes in Anxiety and DepressionBaseline, Mid-point (6 weeks), Post-Intervention (12 weeks)

Anxiety and depression will be assessed through the 14-item Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale (HADS). Seven items assess anxiety while the remaining seven measure depression. There are four response options (0-3), which create scale values from 0-21 for each scale. Three ranges of scores have been identified: 0-7 (non-cases), 8-10 (doubtful cases) and 11-21 (cases).

Changes in addictive eating behavioursBaseline, Mid-point (6 weeks), Post-Intervention (12 weeks)

To assess addiction-like eating behaviours, questions regarding food cravings, loss of control over food and eating, prioritization of food and eating, and guilty feelings due to food or eating will be measured on a 5-point Likert scale with frequencies ranging from "Never" to "4+ times per week". Questions regarding concern from others will be measured on a 3-point Likert scale, with the options "Never", "Yes, but not in the past year", and "Yes, in the past year".

Trial Locations

Locations (1)

University of Lethbridge

🇨🇦

Lethbridge, Alberta, Canada

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