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Increasing parental self-efficacy with emotion-focused family therapy for eating disorders: a process model
47
Citations
20
References
2017
Year
Family InvolvementAdolescent Behavioral HealthCaregiver Self-efficacyEducationMental HealthChild Mental HealthPsychologyFamily SystemsEating DisordersIntervention SciencePsychiatryBehavior TherapyCognitive Behavioral InterventionChild DevelopmentProcess ModelBehavioral SupportChildren's Eating BehaviorFamily PsychologyFamily TherapyParental Self-efficacyMedicineEmotion-focused Family Therapy
A process model was tested whereby parental fear and self-blame were targeted in order to enhance parental self-efficacy and supportive efforts in the context of emotion-focused family therapy (EFFT) for eating disorders (ED). A 2-day EFFT group intervention was delivered to parents of adolescent and adult children with ED. Data were collected from eight treatment sites (N = 124). Data were analyzed using t-tests, regression analyses and structural equation modeling. The findings supported the proposed process model. Through the processing of parents’ maladaptive fear and self-blame, parents felt more empowered to support their child’s recovery. This increase in self-efficacy led to an increase in parents’ intentions to engage in recovery-focused behaviors. This study is the first to test a method for clinicians to increase supportive efforts by targeting and enhancing caregiver self-efficacy via the processing of emotion.
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