Abstract
Background: University students are at elevated risk of developing an eating disorder. The dissonance-based Body Project effectively reduces body dissatisfaction and thin-ideal internalization. Digital adaptations might enhance scalability and accessibility.
Objective: The present manuscript describes the study protocol for a randomized controlled trial among university women in the Netherlands that applies a digitalized version of the Body Project within a preventive framework.
Methods: Dutch university students (N = 180) will be randomized to the experimental condition, the Digitalized Body Project, or a waitlist control condition. The intervention includes four weekly web-based group sessions supported by a digital platform offering psychoeducation and exercises. Primary outcomes will be changes in body dissatisfaction and thin-ideal internalization; secondary outcomes will be reduction in eating disorder symptoms, restrained eating, negative affect and self objectification. Feasibility and acceptability will be evaluated by both participants and by the group facilitators. Assessments take place at baseline (week 0), at postintervention (week 4), and at 4-week (week 8) and 8-week (week 12) follow-up.
Results: The experimental condition is hypothesized to show greater reductions in body dissatisfaction and thinideal internalization compared to the waitlist control group. Feasibility and acceptability data will inform future implementation strategies.
Conclusion: The present study could provide preliminary evidence on the short-term efficacy, feasibility, and acceptability of a clinician- and peer-facilitated digital Body Project in the Dutch university context. The findings can inform refinements for future large-scale trials and practical implementation.
Objective: The present manuscript describes the study protocol for a randomized controlled trial among university women in the Netherlands that applies a digitalized version of the Body Project within a preventive framework.
Methods: Dutch university students (N = 180) will be randomized to the experimental condition, the Digitalized Body Project, or a waitlist control condition. The intervention includes four weekly web-based group sessions supported by a digital platform offering psychoeducation and exercises. Primary outcomes will be changes in body dissatisfaction and thin-ideal internalization; secondary outcomes will be reduction in eating disorder symptoms, restrained eating, negative affect and self objectification. Feasibility and acceptability will be evaluated by both participants and by the group facilitators. Assessments take place at baseline (week 0), at postintervention (week 4), and at 4-week (week 8) and 8-week (week 12) follow-up.
Results: The experimental condition is hypothesized to show greater reductions in body dissatisfaction and thinideal internalization compared to the waitlist control group. Feasibility and acceptability data will inform future implementation strategies.
Conclusion: The present study could provide preliminary evidence on the short-term efficacy, feasibility, and acceptability of a clinician- and peer-facilitated digital Body Project in the Dutch university context. The findings can inform refinements for future large-scale trials and practical implementation.
| Original language | English |
|---|---|
| Article number | 200494 |
| Number of pages | 9 |
| Journal | Mental Health & Prevention |
| Volume | 41 |
| Early online date | Feb 2026 |
| DOIs | |
| Publication status | Published - Mar 2026 |
Keywords
- body dissatisfaction
- dissonance based intervention
- randomized controlled trial
- the digitalized body project
- thin-ideal internalization
- web-based
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