Design and methods of the Longitudinal Eating Disorders Assessment Project research consortium for veterans

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Issue Date
2022-10-17Author
Forbush, Kelsie T.
Swanson, Trevor J.
Gaddy, Melinda
Oehlert, Mary
Doan, Alesha
Morgan, Robert W.
O’Brien, Colin
Chen, Yiyang
Christian, Kylie
Song, Q. Chelsea
Watson, David
Wiese, Joanna
Publisher
Wiley Open Access
Type
Article
Article Version
Scholarly/refereed, publisher version
Rights
© 2022 The Authors. International Journal of Methods in Psychiatric Research published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd. This is an open access article under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution‐NonCommercial‐NoDerivs License.
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Show full item recordAbstract
Introduction
Military service members must maintain a certain body mass index and body fat percentage. Due to weight-loss pressures, some service members may resort to unhealthy behaviors that place them at risk for the development of an eating disorder (ED).Objectives
To understand the scope and impact of EDs in military service members and veterans, we formed the Longitudinal Eating Disorders Assessment Project (LEAP) Consortium. LEAP aims to develop novel screening, assessment, classification, and treatment tools for veterans and military members with a focus on EDs and internalizing psychopathology.Methods
We recruited two independent nationally representative samples of post-9/11 veterans who were separated from service within the past year. Study 1 was a four-wave longitudinal survey and Study 2 was a mixed-methods study that included surveys, structured-clinical interviews, and qualitative interviews.Results
Recruitment samples were representative of the full population of recently separated veterans. Sample weights were created to adjust for sources of non-response bias to the baseline survey. Attrition was low relative to past studies of this population, with only (younger) age predicting attrition at 1-week follow-up.Conclusions
We expect that the LEAP Consortium data will contribute to improved information about EDs in veterans, a serious and understudied problem.
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Citation
Forbush, K. T., Swanson, T. J., Gaddy, M., Oehlert, M., Doan, A., Morgan, R. W., O’Brien, C., Chen, Y., Christian, K., Song, Q. C., Watson, D., & Wiese, J. (2023). Design and methods of the Longitudinal Eating Disorders Assessment Project research consortium for veterans. International Journal of Methods in Psychiatric Research, 32( 2), e1941. https://doi.org/10.1002/mpr.1941
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