scholarly journals Adapting the body project to a non-western culture: a dissonance-based eating disorders prevention program for Saudi women

Author(s):  
Munirah AlShebali ◽  
Carolyn Becker ◽  
Stephen Kellett ◽  
Ahmad AlHadi ◽  
Glenn Waller
Author(s):  
Eric Stice ◽  
Paul Rohde ◽  
Heather Shaw

The Body Project is an empirically based eating disorder prevention program that offers young women an opportunity to critically consider the costs of pursuing the ultra-thin ideal promoted in the mass media, and it improves body acceptance and reduces risk for developing eating disorders. Young women with elevated body dissatisfaction are recruited for group sessions in which they participate in a series of verbal, written, and behavioral exercises in which they consider the negative effects of pursuing the thin-ideal. This online resource provides information on the significance of body image and eating disorders, the intervention theory, the evidence base which supports the theory, recruitment and training procedures, solutions to common challenges, and a new program aimed at reducing obesity onset, as well as intervention scripts and participant handouts. It is the only currently available eating disorder prevention program that has been shown to reduce risk for onset of eating disorders and received support in trials conducted by several independent research groups.


2019 ◽  
Vol 1 ◽  
pp. S187
Author(s):  
R. Turgon ◽  
L. Thiery ◽  
Z. Desbouis ◽  
E. Stice ◽  
R. Shankland

2001 ◽  
Vol 8 (3) ◽  
pp. 248-259 ◽  
Author(s):  
Paula J. Varnado-Sullivan ◽  
Nancy Zucker ◽  
Donald A. Williamson ◽  
Deborah Reas ◽  
Jean Thaw ◽  
...  

2012 ◽  
pp. 161-180
Author(s):  
Eric Stice ◽  
Paul Rohde ◽  
Heather Shaw

Chapter 11 provides the handouts for the 6-session version of the Body Project script. There are roughly 2 home exercises for each session. These handouts are Letter to a Younger Girl, Self-Affirmation form (for the mirror exercise), the Verbal Challenge Form, the Top-10 List form, the Behavioral Exercise Form, the Body Activism Form, a Self-Affirmation Exercise Form. There are also exit exercises for the last session, which include a Letter to a Younger Girl and the Group Body Activism exercise. In addition, the 6-session version includes a handout for the Media Misrepresentation News Flash exercise and a Consequences of Eating Disorders News Flash.


Author(s):  
Karin Eli ◽  
Anna Lavis

AbstractAnorexia nervosa is a paradoxical disorder, regarded across disciplines as a body project and yet also an illness of disembodied subjectivity. This overlooks the role that material environments—including objects and spaces—play in producing embodied experiences of anorexia both within and outside treatment. To address this gap, this paper draws together two ethnographic studies of anorexia to explore the shared themes unearthed by research participants’ engagements with objects that move across boundaries between treatment spaces and everyday lives. Demonstrating how the anorexic body is at once both phenomenologically lived and socio-medically constituted, we argue that an attention to materiality is crucial to understanding lived experiences. A materialist account of anorexia extends the literature on treatment resistance in eating disorders and offers a reconceptualisation of ‘the body in treatment’, showing how  objects and spaces shape, maintain, and even ‘trigger’ anorexia. Therefore, against the background of the high rates of relapse in eating disorders, this analysis calls for consideration of how interventions can better take account of eating disordered embodiment as shaped by material environments.


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