Body Image Clinical Trial
Official title:
Effectiveness of the BodyKind School-based Body Image Intervention: a Cluster Randomised Control Trial
Body dissatisfaction, a primary risk factor for eating disorders, is prevalent among adolescents. Given increases in adolescent body dissatisfaction since the Covid-19 pandemic, there is a pressing need for universal body image interventions, particularly for older adolescents aged 15-17 years, as this is a peak time for the onset of adolescent body image concerns; however, currently there are no evidence-based body image programmes for this age group. This cluster randomised control trial will evaluate the effectiveness of BodyKind, a four session, teacher led, mixed gender body image intervention for older adolescents that incorporates empirically supported principles of self-compassion, cognitive dissonance and social justice. The version of BodyKind culturally adapted for the Irish context will be evaluated in adolescents aged 15-17 years in fourth year in post-primary schools in Ireland. Primary outcomes of body dissatisfaction, body appreciation and psychological wellbeing, in addition to secondary outcomes of body ideal internalisation, self-compassion and compassion for others will be assessed at pre, post and 2 month follow up in intervention groups (who receive the BodyKind programme) and waitlist controls.
Status | Recruiting |
Enrollment | 600 |
Est. completion date | June 30, 2024 |
Est. primary completion date | June 30, 2024 |
Accepts healthy volunteers | Accepts Healthy Volunteers |
Gender | All |
Age group | 15 Years to 17 Years |
Eligibility | Inclusion Criteria: - Schools will be eligible if 1. they are a second-level school in Ireland that offers the Transition Year (TY) programme to students 2. will deliver the intervention as part of their curriculum to students in TY 3. teaching staff are willing to complete the 2.5-hour BodyKind teacher training programme. Students will be eligible if - they are in TY in a second-level school in Ireland and are aged 15-17 years - If their parent consents to their participation AND if they provide a signed assent form . Teachers will be eligible if - They are qualified secondary school teacher - They agree to complete the BodyKind teacher training - Return a signed informed consent form Exclusion Criteria: - Schools will be excluded if - they are not a second-level school in Ireland or if they do not offer the TY programme to students - will not deliver the intervention as part of their curriculum to students in TY - teaching staff are not willing to complete the 2.5-hour BodyKind teacher training programme. Students will be excluded if - they are not in TY in a second-level school and are not aged 15-17 years - If parental consent has not been obtained OR if they fail to sign a participant assent . Teachers will be excluded if - They are not qualified secondary school teacher - They do not agree to complete the BodyKind teacher training - Do not return a signed informed consent form |
Country | Name | City | State |
---|---|---|---|
Ireland | University College Dublin | Dublin |
Lead Sponsor | Collaborator |
---|---|
University College Dublin | Be Real USA NFP, Irish Research Council, Jigsaw, The National Centre for Youth Mental Health, Ireland |
Ireland,
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* Note: There are 13 references in all — Click here to view all references
Type | Measure | Description | Time frame | Safety issue |
---|---|---|---|---|
Other | Teacher fidelity | Teachers will complete a checklist at the end of each lesson indicating the extent to which they covered key aspects of the lessons. Teachers are required to cover 7 key learning objectives for each of the four lessons. Teachers indicate the number of key learning objectives they covered in each class delivered (1= Yes, 0=No). Higher scores indicate that more key learning objectives were covered by the teacher, thereby indicating higher levels of fidelity to the programme. (Min-Max score: 0-28) | 1 week post intervention | |
Primary | Body Appreciation | Body Appreciation Scale-2 is a 10-item scale. Responses to items such "I feel good in my body" are indicated on a 5-point Likert Scale (1-5), with higher scores indicating higher levels of body appreciation (Min-Max: 10-50). BAS-2 demonstrates good validity and reliability among international adolescent samples | 1 week pre-intervention, 1 week post-intervention, 2 month post intervention follow up | |
Primary | Body Dissatisfaction | Body Satisfaction Visual Analogue Scales Items from the appearance/weight subscales of the Eating Disorder Examination Questionnaire will be adapted as 10-point visual analogue scales (VAS) to assess state body satisfaction with various aspects of appearance. Participants will use a 10-point slider 0 (not at all satisfied) and 10 (very satisfied) to rate how satisfied they feel with their body shape, weight, and size. Participants will also rate their satisfaction with height, muscle mass/tone and overall appearance. A mean score from the six appearance dimensions will be calculated, with higher scores representing higher state body satisfaction. This approach has been shown to have good convergent validity with the Eating Disorder Inventory Body Dissatisfaction Subscale in adolescents (r = .62). Higher scores indicate higher body satisfaction. (Min-Max score: 6-60] | 1 week pre-intervention, 1 week post-intervention, 2 month post intervention follow up | |
Primary | Psychological wellbeing | The Five-Item World Health Organisation Wellbeing Index is a unidimensional scale that measures emotional wellbeing using five positively worded items. Participants indicate the extent to which positive feelings, such as "I have felt calm and relaxed" were experienced over the last two weeks, using 6-point Likert scales ranging from 0 (not present) to 5 (constantly present). Raw scores are transformed to a score from 0 (worst thinkable well-being) to 100 (best thinkable well-being) with scores <50 suggesting poor emotional well-being.The WHO-5 has been validated for use with adolescents and has adequate validity as an outcome measure in clinical trials | 1 week pre-intervention, 1 week post-intervention, 2 month post intervention follow up | |
Secondary | Self-compassion | The Self-Compassion Scale for Youth is a shortened and modified version of the Self-Compassion Scale developed for use with adolescent populations. The SCS-Y is a 14-item scale that contains subscales for the aspects of compassion; self-kindness, self-judgement, common humanity, isolation, mindfulness and over identification. Participants respond to items such as "When I feel frustrated or disappointed, I think about it over and over again." on 5-point Likert scales ranging from 1 (never) to 5 (always). Negatively worded items are reverse coded. Higher scores indicate higher levels of self-compassion [Min-Max scores: 14-70]. The SCS-Y has been validated among adolescents aged 12-17 years, where mean scores range between 1.0-2.49 (low), 2.5-3.5 (moderate), and 3.51-5.0 (high) and demonstrated good levels of internal consistency with Cronbach's alpha of >=.82 for each subscale. | 1 week pre-intervention, 1 week post-intervention, 2 month post intervention follow up | |
Secondary | Body ideal internalization | Internalization-General subscale of the Sociocultural Attitudes Towards Appearance Scale-3 will be used to assess internalization of social media ideals. Items were adapted to social media by substituting the words "social media" into item stems e.g. "I would like my body to look like people on social media". The five-item scale is measured using five-point Likert scales ranging from 1 (definitely disagree) and 5 (definitely agree). Negatively worded items are reversed coded and items are averaged to yield a mean score, with higher scores indicating greater body ideal internalization (Min-Max Score: 5-25). The original scale has been shown to be a reliable in adolescent girls and boys and the adapted scale has been found demonstrate good psychometric properties and good levels of internal consistency, ranging from a = 0.75 among male, and a = 0.84 among female adolescents | 1 week pre-intervention, 1 week post-intervention, 2 month post intervention follow up | |
Secondary | Appearance related social media use | The Appearance-Related Social Media Consciousness Scale is a 13-item scale that captures the extent to which individuals' thoughts and behaviours reflect ongoing awareness of whether they might look attractive to a social media audience. Given that appearance-related use is a more important predictor of body dissatisfaction compared with general/non-visual social media use, this measure is important to include. Items such as "I think about how specific parts of my body will look when people see my pictures on social media" are measured using 7-point Likert scales ranging from 1 (Never) to 7 (Always). Higher scores indicate higher levels of consciousness about appearance-related social media use (Min-Max score: 13-91) ASMC scores demonstrate strong internal consistency, convergent and incremental validity, and test-retest reliability in adolescent boys and girls | 1 week pre-intervention, 1 week post-intervention, 2 month post intervention follow up | |
Secondary | Compassion towards others | The Compassion Towards Others Action Subscale of the Compassionate Engagement and Action Scales Youth, measures compassion in adolescents. The 4-item action orientation competency subscale focuses specifically on actions aimed to prevent and alleviate distress/suffering in others, such as "When others are distressed or upset by things, I am kind and supportive to them". Participants respond using 10-point Likert scale from 0 (never) to 10 (always) with higher scores indicating higher compassionate action orientations towards others (Min-Max score: 0-40). This subscale shows good internal consistency with alpha values across items ranging between a=.84-.88 in adolescent boys and girls. | 1 week pre-intervention, 1 week post-intervention, 2 month post intervention follow up |
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