Yoga as adjunctive therapy in the treatment of people with anorexia nervosa: a Delphi study

Abstract Background There is preliminary evidence to suggest that yoga can be beneficial in reducing anxiety, depression and general eating disorder symptoms in people with Anorexia Nervosa (AN). It is unclear whether the therapeutic benefits of yoga are supported or utilised in the treatment of AN...

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Main Authors: Laura Rizzuto, Phillipa Hay, Melissa Noetel, Stephen Touyz
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2021-09-01
Series:Journal of Eating Disorders
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1186/s40337-021-00467-9
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spelling doaj-e84c199dc3234375aa2dbea9fdb6b7b52021-09-12T11:09:45ZengBMCJournal of Eating Disorders2050-29742021-09-019111210.1186/s40337-021-00467-9Yoga as adjunctive therapy in the treatment of people with anorexia nervosa: a Delphi studyLaura Rizzuto0Phillipa Hay1Melissa Noetel2Stephen Touyz3School of Psychology, The University of SydneyTranslational Health Research Institute, School of Medicine, Western Sydney UniversityUniversity of Technology SydneySchool of Psychology, The University of SydneyAbstract Background There is preliminary evidence to suggest that yoga can be beneficial in reducing anxiety, depression and general eating disorder symptoms in people with Anorexia Nervosa (AN). It is unclear whether the therapeutic benefits of yoga are supported or utilised in the treatment of AN amongst clinical experts. The present study aimed to explore and synthesise expert opinion on the use of yoga as an adjunctive therapy in the management of anxiety, depression and over-exercise in individuals with AN. Methods A Delphi methodology was employed, with clinicians considered experts in the treatment of AN recruited internationally to form the panel (n = 18). The first iteration of questionnaires comprised of four open-ended questions concerning the experts’ understanding of the term yoga and opinions on its’ use in therapy generally and more specifically in the treatment of AN. Using content analysis, statements were derived from this data and included as Likert-based items in two subsequent rounds where panellists rated their level of agreement on each item. Seventeen out of 18 respondents completed all three iterations. Results Consensus (level of agreement defined at ≥ 85%) was achieved for 36.47% of the items included in the second and third rounds. The panel reached consensus on items defining yoga and pertaining to its’ general benefits. The panel agreed that yoga is a adjunct therapy for various problems, consensus was not achieved on the specific use of yoga as an adjunct therapy in the treatment of comorbid anxiety, depression or trauma in patients with AN. Although the expert panel acknowledged a number of benefits for use of yoga in AN, they strongly endorsed that future research should evaluate the potential risks of using yoga as an embodied practice. Conclusions It is possible that yoga could be considered for inclusion in future guidelines if supported by empirical research. We conclude that there seems to be enough consensus that such further scientific investigation is warranted. Plain English summary This study aimed to explore expert opinion on the use of yoga as an adjunctive therapy in the management of anxiety, depression and over-exercise in individuals with Anorexia Nervosa (AN). Clinicians considered experts in the treatment of AN recruited internationally to form the panel (n = 18). Experts were asked about their understanding of the term yoga and their opinions on its’ use in therapy. The panel reached consensus on items defining yoga and pertaining to its’ general benefits. Although the panel agreed that yoga is a nice additional therapy for various problems, consensus was not achieved on the use of yoga as an additional therapy in the treatment of specific problems like anxiety, depression or trauma in people with AN. The expert panel acknowledged a number of benefits for use of yoga in AN. However the panel strongly considered that future research should evaluate the potential risks of using yoga as an embodied practice. The areas of collective agreement gained in the study can serve as preliminary guidelines for the use of yoga in AN whilst guiding future research directions.https://doi.org/10.1186/s40337-021-00467-9Anorexia NervosaDelphiYogaExercise
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Laura Rizzuto
Phillipa Hay
Melissa Noetel
Stephen Touyz
spellingShingle Laura Rizzuto
Phillipa Hay
Melissa Noetel
Stephen Touyz
Yoga as adjunctive therapy in the treatment of people with anorexia nervosa: a Delphi study
Journal of Eating Disorders
Anorexia Nervosa
Delphi
Yoga
Exercise
author_facet Laura Rizzuto
Phillipa Hay
Melissa Noetel
Stephen Touyz
author_sort Laura Rizzuto
title Yoga as adjunctive therapy in the treatment of people with anorexia nervosa: a Delphi study
title_short Yoga as adjunctive therapy in the treatment of people with anorexia nervosa: a Delphi study
title_full Yoga as adjunctive therapy in the treatment of people with anorexia nervosa: a Delphi study
title_fullStr Yoga as adjunctive therapy in the treatment of people with anorexia nervosa: a Delphi study
title_full_unstemmed Yoga as adjunctive therapy in the treatment of people with anorexia nervosa: a Delphi study
title_sort yoga as adjunctive therapy in the treatment of people with anorexia nervosa: a delphi study
publisher BMC
series Journal of Eating Disorders
issn 2050-2974
publishDate 2021-09-01
description Abstract Background There is preliminary evidence to suggest that yoga can be beneficial in reducing anxiety, depression and general eating disorder symptoms in people with Anorexia Nervosa (AN). It is unclear whether the therapeutic benefits of yoga are supported or utilised in the treatment of AN amongst clinical experts. The present study aimed to explore and synthesise expert opinion on the use of yoga as an adjunctive therapy in the management of anxiety, depression and over-exercise in individuals with AN. Methods A Delphi methodology was employed, with clinicians considered experts in the treatment of AN recruited internationally to form the panel (n = 18). The first iteration of questionnaires comprised of four open-ended questions concerning the experts’ understanding of the term yoga and opinions on its’ use in therapy generally and more specifically in the treatment of AN. Using content analysis, statements were derived from this data and included as Likert-based items in two subsequent rounds where panellists rated their level of agreement on each item. Seventeen out of 18 respondents completed all three iterations. Results Consensus (level of agreement defined at ≥ 85%) was achieved for 36.47% of the items included in the second and third rounds. The panel reached consensus on items defining yoga and pertaining to its’ general benefits. The panel agreed that yoga is a adjunct therapy for various problems, consensus was not achieved on the specific use of yoga as an adjunct therapy in the treatment of comorbid anxiety, depression or trauma in patients with AN. Although the expert panel acknowledged a number of benefits for use of yoga in AN, they strongly endorsed that future research should evaluate the potential risks of using yoga as an embodied practice. Conclusions It is possible that yoga could be considered for inclusion in future guidelines if supported by empirical research. We conclude that there seems to be enough consensus that such further scientific investigation is warranted. Plain English summary This study aimed to explore expert opinion on the use of yoga as an adjunctive therapy in the management of anxiety, depression and over-exercise in individuals with Anorexia Nervosa (AN). Clinicians considered experts in the treatment of AN recruited internationally to form the panel (n = 18). Experts were asked about their understanding of the term yoga and their opinions on its’ use in therapy. The panel reached consensus on items defining yoga and pertaining to its’ general benefits. Although the panel agreed that yoga is a nice additional therapy for various problems, consensus was not achieved on the use of yoga as an additional therapy in the treatment of specific problems like anxiety, depression or trauma in people with AN. The expert panel acknowledged a number of benefits for use of yoga in AN. However the panel strongly considered that future research should evaluate the potential risks of using yoga as an embodied practice. The areas of collective agreement gained in the study can serve as preliminary guidelines for the use of yoga in AN whilst guiding future research directions.
topic Anorexia Nervosa
Delphi
Yoga
Exercise
url https://doi.org/10.1186/s40337-021-00467-9
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