Food addiction treatment: a systematic review
- Authors: Terblanche, Anchen
- Date: 20223-12
- Subjects: Food addiction , obesity
- Language: English
- Type: Master's theses , text
- Identifier: http://hdl.handle.net/10948/63026 , vital:73083
- Description: The proposed study sought to explore what treatments are available for food addiction, by means of systematically reviewing the existing literature. Although food addiction does not have a formal definition in the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders-V, it has many similarities to substance abuse and has been frequently associated with general, as well as eating disorder-related psychopathology. Exploring the concept of food addiction and the range of treatments available allows for furthering our knowledge of the Food Addiction phenomenon. This systematic review is a synthesis of available research that will aid healthcare practitioners to review what treatments are available for food addiction and what possible referrals can be made. This study critically analysed relevant literature from databases such as EBSCOhost, SAGE Publications, JSTOR, APA PsychINFO and Science Direct consisting of journal articles published in English on food addiction treatment. The researcher followed Uman’s (2011) eight steps for writing a systematic review. The steps proposed by Holly et al. (2011) guided the search strategy to identify relevant studies. The findings of the study will assist practitioners in their understanding of treatment options for food addiction. Treatments that are discussed that is non-psychological are: Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation (TMS), pharmacotherapy, surgery, acupuncture, and ketogenic diets. Treatments that are psychological that were discussed are: Cognitive Behavioural Therapy (CBT), Dialectal Behaviour Therapy (DBT), Acceptance and Commitment Therapy (ACT), Interpersonal Therapy, Mindfulness Interventions, Motivational Interviewing, harm reduction and 12-step self-help groups such as Overeaters Anonymous (OA). Combinations of different treatments are also discussed. , Thesis (Ma) -- Faculty of Health Science, 2023
- Full Text:
- Date Issued: 20223-12
- Authors: Terblanche, Anchen
- Date: 20223-12
- Subjects: Food addiction , obesity
- Language: English
- Type: Master's theses , text
- Identifier: http://hdl.handle.net/10948/63026 , vital:73083
- Description: The proposed study sought to explore what treatments are available for food addiction, by means of systematically reviewing the existing literature. Although food addiction does not have a formal definition in the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders-V, it has many similarities to substance abuse and has been frequently associated with general, as well as eating disorder-related psychopathology. Exploring the concept of food addiction and the range of treatments available allows for furthering our knowledge of the Food Addiction phenomenon. This systematic review is a synthesis of available research that will aid healthcare practitioners to review what treatments are available for food addiction and what possible referrals can be made. This study critically analysed relevant literature from databases such as EBSCOhost, SAGE Publications, JSTOR, APA PsychINFO and Science Direct consisting of journal articles published in English on food addiction treatment. The researcher followed Uman’s (2011) eight steps for writing a systematic review. The steps proposed by Holly et al. (2011) guided the search strategy to identify relevant studies. The findings of the study will assist practitioners in their understanding of treatment options for food addiction. Treatments that are discussed that is non-psychological are: Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation (TMS), pharmacotherapy, surgery, acupuncture, and ketogenic diets. Treatments that are psychological that were discussed are: Cognitive Behavioural Therapy (CBT), Dialectal Behaviour Therapy (DBT), Acceptance and Commitment Therapy (ACT), Interpersonal Therapy, Mindfulness Interventions, Motivational Interviewing, harm reduction and 12-step self-help groups such as Overeaters Anonymous (OA). Combinations of different treatments are also discussed. , Thesis (Ma) -- Faculty of Health Science, 2023
- Full Text:
- Date Issued: 20223-12
Spousal experiences of living with a gambling disordered partner and intimate partner violence in South Africa: a grounded theory study
- Authors: Oppelt, Thelma
- Date: 20223-12
- Subjects: Gambling and crime -- South Africa , Gambling Disordered
- Language: English
- Type: Doctoral's theses , text
- Identifier: http://hdl.handle.net/10948/62980 , vital:73079
- Description: I have been motivated to conduct this research on a professional and personal level. As an only child, I grew up with individuals who gambled every day of their lives, and the spouses/partners who struggled with being labelled by society as weak to stay with them. Furthermore, I have personal insights into the Intimate Partner Violence (IPV) stories of the women, having been tagged along with my mother who worked at a women’s support centre in our community. I can appreciate the help that these women provide to each other and the perspectives they lend to this study. The insights I bring from my personal experiences have assisted me in making a personal connection with this research area. I became the first in my family to attend university, even though my father was a cleaner and never completed high school. I performed well as an undergraduate and completed my first degree, with Psychology as a major. My master’s degree challenged me to look at spouses’ experiences of the psychological and financial trauma of living with a male gambling disordered partner, and out of it the doctoral thesis of Intimate Partner Violence as a specific form of violence in a gambling disordered relationship was formed. I worked as a researcher for five years at the Human Sciences Research Council (HSRC). At the HSRC I had come to realise that I had to find a solution for my difficulty in working on projects far removed from Psychology or human interactions. I was always the first person to be nominated to do qualitative interviews and analyse the data, but all in fields far removed from my chosen field of study. However, I do appreciate that if I had not done all those projects, I would not have been ready to embark on my PhD journey. Upon leaving the HSRC, I started as the Senior Programmes and Safe House Manager at a not-for-profit organisation. I do not think that I would have been able to do justice to the stories that many of the individuals have described in this research study, without xvii working for an organisation that advocates for the safety of individuals who find themselves in such circumstances. On a personal level, even though I have never gambled in my life, I believe that gambling is a personal choice. I have volunteered at sober living homes and have seen some of the problems that spouses and their families experience. Because of my own experiences, I decided that the topic for my PhD thesis could explore the way Intimate Partner Violence is socially constructed and the implications of being the spouse of someone who is challenged by a gambling disorder. , Thesis (PHD) -- Faculty of Health Science, 2023
- Full Text:
- Date Issued: 20223-12
- Authors: Oppelt, Thelma
- Date: 20223-12
- Subjects: Gambling and crime -- South Africa , Gambling Disordered
- Language: English
- Type: Doctoral's theses , text
- Identifier: http://hdl.handle.net/10948/62980 , vital:73079
- Description: I have been motivated to conduct this research on a professional and personal level. As an only child, I grew up with individuals who gambled every day of their lives, and the spouses/partners who struggled with being labelled by society as weak to stay with them. Furthermore, I have personal insights into the Intimate Partner Violence (IPV) stories of the women, having been tagged along with my mother who worked at a women’s support centre in our community. I can appreciate the help that these women provide to each other and the perspectives they lend to this study. The insights I bring from my personal experiences have assisted me in making a personal connection with this research area. I became the first in my family to attend university, even though my father was a cleaner and never completed high school. I performed well as an undergraduate and completed my first degree, with Psychology as a major. My master’s degree challenged me to look at spouses’ experiences of the psychological and financial trauma of living with a male gambling disordered partner, and out of it the doctoral thesis of Intimate Partner Violence as a specific form of violence in a gambling disordered relationship was formed. I worked as a researcher for five years at the Human Sciences Research Council (HSRC). At the HSRC I had come to realise that I had to find a solution for my difficulty in working on projects far removed from Psychology or human interactions. I was always the first person to be nominated to do qualitative interviews and analyse the data, but all in fields far removed from my chosen field of study. However, I do appreciate that if I had not done all those projects, I would not have been ready to embark on my PhD journey. Upon leaving the HSRC, I started as the Senior Programmes and Safe House Manager at a not-for-profit organisation. I do not think that I would have been able to do justice to the stories that many of the individuals have described in this research study, without xvii working for an organisation that advocates for the safety of individuals who find themselves in such circumstances. On a personal level, even though I have never gambled in my life, I believe that gambling is a personal choice. I have volunteered at sober living homes and have seen some of the problems that spouses and their families experience. Because of my own experiences, I decided that the topic for my PhD thesis could explore the way Intimate Partner Violence is socially constructed and the implications of being the spouse of someone who is challenged by a gambling disorder. , Thesis (PHD) -- Faculty of Health Science, 2023
- Full Text:
- Date Issued: 20223-12
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