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Dive into the research topics where Christy F. Telch is active.

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Featured researches published by Christy F. Telch.


Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology | 1993

Group cognitive-behavioral therapy and group interpersonal psychotherapy for the nonpurging bulimic individual : a controlled comparison

Wilfley De; W S Agras; Christy F. Telch; Rossiter Em; John A. Schneider; Cole Ag; Sifford La; Susan Raeburn

Abstract This study evaluated the effectiveness of group cognitive-behavioral treatment (CBT) and group interpersonal psychotherapy (IPT) for binge eating. Fifty-six women with nonpurging bulimia were randomly assigned to 1 of 3 groups: CBT, IPT, or a wait-list control (WL). Treatment was administered in small groups that met for 16 weekly sessions. At posttreatment, both group CBT and group IPT treatment conditions showed significant improvement in reducing binge eating, whereas the WL condition did not. Binge eating remained significantly below baseline levels for both treatment conditions at 6-month and 1-year follow-ups. These data support the central role of both eating behavior and interpersonal factors in the understanding and treatment of bulimia.


International Journal of Eating Disorders | 1994

Obesity, binge eating and psychopathology: Are they related?

Christy F. Telch; W. Stewart Agras

Obese female subjects with binge eating disorder BED; (N = 107) completed the Beck Depression Inventory, Symptom Checklist-90, Inventory of Interpersonal Problems, and Rosenberg Self-Esteem Scale. Subjects were divided into moderate or severe binger on the basis of scores on the Binge Eating Scale, and grouped into moderately or severely obese by performing a median split on their weights. Spearman correlational analyses were performed to determine the relationship between psychopathology and obesity and psychopathology and binge eating. Analyses of variance (ANOVAs) were then performed using scores on the psychological measures with subjects grouped both by severity of obesity and severity of binge eating. The results indicated that in our sample, obesity and scores on the measures of psychiatric symptomatology were unrelated. However, a significant positive relationship was found between binge eating severity and degree of psychiatric symptomatology. We suggest that binge eating may account for the observed relationship between obesity and psychopathology reported in previous studies. We discuss the importance of assessing BED when conducting research with obese individuals.


Behavior Therapy | 1998

The effects of caloric deprivation and negative affect on binge eating in obese binge-eating disordered women

W. Stewart Agras; Christy F. Telch

Sixty obese women meeting Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM-IV ; American Psychiatric Association, 1994 ) research criteria for binge-eating disorder were randomly allocated either to a 14-hour period of caloric deprivation or to no deprivation. These women were then randomized within each deprivation condition to an induced negative or neutral mood before being served a multi-item buffet. Negative mood, but not caloric deprivation, significantly increased loss of control over eating. For self-defined binges, negative mood, but not caloric deprivation, significantly increased the occurrence of binge eating. However, for investigatordefined binges, both deprivation and negative mood increased the occurrence of binge eating. Caloric deprivation also led participants to eat significantly more during the buffet, but not over the laboratory day. Fat intake was significantly higher in both self-defined and investigator-defined binges as compared to overeating episodes. For those in the negative mood condition, anxiety had significantly declined by the end of the buffet.


International Journal of Eating Disorders | 1988

Binge eating increases with increasing adiposity

Christy F. Telch; W. Stewart Agras; Elise M. Rossiter

Self-report and interview data were obtained from 81 obese patients to evaluate the distribution of binge eating, defined by DSM-III criteria for bulimia, across a range of adiposity. Binge eating was found to be significantly more prevalent as the degree of obesity increased.


International Journal of Eating Disorders | 1996

Do emotional states influence binge eating in the obese

Christy F. Telch; W. Stewart Agras

OBJECTIVE The purpose of this experimental investigation was to test the hypothesis that negative affective states trigger disinhibited eating in the form of binge eating in subjects with binge eating disorder (BED). METHOD BED subjects and weight-matched non-eating disordered subjects (NED) attended a laboratory experiment during which they were randomly assigned to a negative or neutral mood induction procedure prior to being served a multi-item buffet. The dependent variable of interest was postmood induction caloric intake. RESULTS There were no significant differences in caloric intake between subjects in the negative and neutral mood conditions. However, negative affect was associated with eating episodes labeled binges, and associated with loss of control. DISCUSSION Our findings suggest that mood may be an important factor that discriminates overeating and binge eating.


Journal of Clinical Psychology | 1999

Dialectical behavior therapy for Binge-Eating Disorder.

Susan Wiser; Christy F. Telch

This study evaluated the use of dialectical behavior therapy (DBT) adapted for binge eating disorder (BED). Women with BED (N = 44) were randomly assigned to group DBT or to a wait-list control condition and were administered the Eating Disorder Examination in addition to measures of weight, mood, and affect regulation at baseline and posttreatment. Treated women evidenced significant improvement on measures of binge eating and eating pathology compared with controls, and 89% of the women receiving DBT had stopped binge eating by the end of treatment. Abstinence rates were reduced to 56% at the 6-month follow-up. Overall, the findings on the measures of weight, mood, and affect regulation were not significant. These results support further research into DBT as a treatment for BED.


Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology | 1989

Cognitive-Behavioral and Response-Prevention Treatments for Bulimia Nervosa.

W. Stewart Agras; John A. Schneider; Bruce A. Arnow; Susan Raeburn; Christy F. Telch

This study was designed to assess the additive effects of major components of cognitive-behavioral treatment for bulimia nervosa. Seventy-seven female patients with bulimia nervosa were allocated at random to one of four conditions: wait-list control, self-monitoring of caloric intake and purging behaviors, cognitive-behavioral treatment, and cognitive-behavioral treatment combined with response prevention of vomiting. In the treatment conditions, participants were seen individually for fourteen 1-hr sessions over a 4-month period. All the treatment groups showed significant improvement, whereas the wait-list control group did not. Cognitive-behavioral treatment was, however, the most successful in reducing purging and in promoting positive psychological changes. Fifty-six percent of participants in this condition ceased binge eating and purging by the end of treatment, and the frequency of purging declined by 77.2% during the same period. Of the three treatment conditions, only cognitive-behavioral treatment was superior to the wait-list control. At the 6-month follow-up, 59% of the cognitive-behavioral group were abstinent, and purging had declined by 80%. Cognitive-behavioral treatment was significantly superior to the other treatment groups at this time. Thus, the addition of response prevention of vomiting did not enhance the efficacy of cognitive-behavioral treatment, and the evidence suggests that it may have had a deleterious effect.


Behaviour Research and Therapy | 1989

Role of cognitive appraisal in panic-related avoidance

Michael J. Telch; Mary E. Brouillard; Christy F. Telch; W. Stewart Agras; C. Barr Taylor

The present study examined several dimensions of panic cognitions to test whether panic appraisals predict phobicity among panic sufferers. Thirty-five patients meeting DSM-III-R criteria for panic disorder with minimal or no phobic avoidance were compared to 40 patients meeting DSM-III-R criteria for panic disorder with agoraphobia (severe). The two groups looked strikingly similar on measures of panic symptoms, panic frequency and panic severity. As expected, patients diagnosed as having panic disorder with agoraphobia reported significantly more depression and phobic avoidance than patients with PD. Striking differences emerged on each of the following panic appraisal dimensions: (a) anticipated panic, (b) perceived consequences of panic, and (c) perceived self-efficacy in coping with panic. In each case, patients with panic disorder and agoraphobia reported significantly more dysfunctional panic appraisals than patients with panic disorder and no avoidance. Of those panic appraisal dimensions studied, anticipated panic emerged as the most potent correlate of agoraphobic avoidance. These findings support the hypothesis that cognitive appraisal factors may play an important role in the genesis or maintenance of phobic avoidance among panic patients.


Behavior Therapy | 1994

Weight loss, cognitive-behavioral, and desipramine treatments in binge eating disorder. An additive design

W. Stewart Agras; Christy F. Telch; Bruce A. Arnow; Kathleen L. Eldredge; Denise E. Wilfley; Susan Raeburn; Henderson J; Margaret Marnell

The aim of this study was to compare the effects of weight loss treatment, cognitive-behavioral treatment, and desipramine on binge eating and weight in a three group additive design involving 108 overweight participants with binge eating disorder. Subjects were allocated at random to either 9-months weight-loss-only treatment; 3-months of cognitive-behavioral treatment followed by weight loss treatment for 6-months; or the combination treatment with desipramine added for the last 6-months. After 3-months of treatment, those receiving cognitive-behavioral therapy had reduced binge eating significantly more than participants receiving weight loss therapy only, and the weight loss only group had lost significantly more weight than those in the cognitive-behavioral groups. The addition of medication did not lead to greater reductions in the frequency of binge eating. Hence, there was no evidence that either cognitive-behavioral therapy or desipramine added to the effectiveness of weight loss therapy. However, those receiving medication lost significantly more weight than the comparable group without medication at follow-up. Abstinence from binge eating was associated with significantly greater weight losses. Overall, however, the achieved weight losses were small and the abstinence rates low. Moreover, there were no differences between the three groups either at the end of treatment or at follow-up. Suggestions for further research aimed at improving the therapeutic results for this difficult clinical problem are discussed.


International Journal of Eating Disorders | 1993

Cluster B personality disorder characteristics predict outcome in the treatment of bulimia nervosa

Elise M. Rossiter; W. Stewart Agras; Christy F. Telch; John A. Schneider

The Personality Disorders Examination (PDE) was administered to 71 bulimia nervosa patients at baseline assessment in a study comparing the effectiveness of cognitive-behavioral treatment with desipramine or the combination of both treatments. Personality disorder subscales were combined into single DSM-III-R cluster scores. A high cluster B score (consisting of antisocial, borderline, histrionic, and narcissistic features) significantly predicted poor outcome at 16 weeks and was a better predictor of outcome than borderline personality characteristics alone or any other DSM-III-R cluster score or combination of cluster scores. In contrast pretreatment depression level, self-esteem, degree of dietary restraint, frequency of purging, and history of anorexia nervosa were not significantly related to outcome. At 1-year follow-up there was still a trend toward high cluster B scores predicting poor treatment outcome. Cluster B score was not significantly correlated with percentage of sessions attended nor did subjects with higher cluster B scores have a better outcome with either specific treatment. These results suggest that further investigation of alternative treatments is warranted with high cluster B individuals to determine if treatment effectiveness can be improved.

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