Service evaluation of multi-family therapy for anorexia groups between 2013-2021 in a specialist child and adolescent eating disorders service.
See Heng YimSam WhitePublished in: Clinical child psychology and psychiatry (2023)
The aims of the service evaluation were to examine the effectiveness of multi-family therapy for anorexia nervosa (MFT-AN) on family relationships, as well as to understand families' experiences of MFT in a specialist child and adolescent eating disorders service between 2013-2021. Mixed-methods were used ( t -tests and reflexive thematic analysis). Delivery was in-person in 2013-2019, and moved online from 2020 due to COVID-19. Responses from a total of 57 families and 190 people were analysed. MFT improved family functioning from pre-to post MFT as measured by the Systemic Clinical Observation in Routine Evaluation (SCORE-15). Sub-group analysis by family roles showed that at four-month follow-up, the effects were no longer significant among parents. On the contrary, preliminary analysis showed that although young people did not report any improvement at post-intervention, family functioning was reported to increase at follow-up. Four themes were constructed: being together as a family and as a group ; individuality: everyone's recovery is different ; MFT as an emotion 'hotpot' , and online versus virtual groups: not a one-size-fits-all . More robust follow-up data are needed to ascertain the effects of online MFT-AN.