Skip to main content

Compassion-focused acceptance and commitment therapy for women with restrictive eating and problematic body-checking: A multiple baseline across participants study (Pages 144-152)

Journal of Contextual Behavioral Science (JCBS)

Volume 16, April 2020, Pages 144-152

Authors

Mary L. Hill, L. Ward Schaefer, Samuel D. Spencer, Akihiko Masuda

Abstract

Using a nonconcurrent multiple baseline design across participants, the present study evaluated the effectiveness of outpatient compassion-focused acceptance and commitment therapy (ACT) for women with restrictive eating and problematic body-checking. Three women with these concerns participated in ten sessions of individual compassion-focused ACT. Visual inspection suggested systematic changes in self-monitored eating disorder (ED) behaviors, including body-checking, and clinically relevant behaviors in a valued life domain in expected directions across all participants. These changes corresponded with improvements in self-compassion and body image flexibility, hypothesized processes of change in ACT, and with reductions in general ED pathology and psychological distress. Implications and future directions are discussed.

This article is restricted to ACBS members. Please join or login with your ACBS account.