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Eating and Body Image Team

Anna Ciao, PhD


Curriculum vitae


Department of Psychology

Western Washington University





Department of Psychology

Western Washington University



Developing a justice-focused body image program for U.S. middle schoolers: a school-based community-engaged research process.


Journal article


Summer Pascual, Alyssa Martini, Jessica Gambito, Casper Gemar, Emilee Bell, Kevin Delucio, A. Ciao
Eating Disorders, 2024

Semantic Scholar DOI PubMed
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Cite

APA   Click to copy
Pascual, S., Martini, A., Gambito, J., Gemar, C., Bell, E., Delucio, K., & Ciao, A. (2024). Developing a justice-focused body image program for U.S. middle schoolers: a school-based community-engaged research process. Eating Disorders.


Chicago/Turabian   Click to copy
Pascual, Summer, Alyssa Martini, Jessica Gambito, Casper Gemar, Emilee Bell, Kevin Delucio, and A. Ciao. “Developing a Justice-Focused Body Image Program for U.S. Middle Schoolers: a School-Based Community-Engaged Research Process.” Eating Disorders (2024).


MLA   Click to copy
Pascual, Summer, et al. “Developing a Justice-Focused Body Image Program for U.S. Middle Schoolers: a School-Based Community-Engaged Research Process.” Eating Disorders, 2024.


BibTeX   Click to copy

@article{summer2024a,
  title = {Developing a justice-focused body image program for U.S. middle schoolers: a school-based community-engaged research process.},
  year = {2024},
  journal = {Eating Disorders},
  author = {Pascual, Summer and Martini, Alyssa and Gambito, Jessica and Gemar, Casper and Bell, Emilee and Delucio, Kevin and Ciao, A.}
}

Abstract

We describe a community-engaged research process to co-create and implement an evidence-informed, diversity-focused body image program for early adolescents. Our team included middle school staff, students, and teachers, and university faculty and students. Team members had a diverse range of intersecting cis- and transgender, racial, sexuality, and disability identities. Specific steps to the research process included: (1) establishing team leads at each site to maintain a collaborative and non-hierarchical team structure; (2) bi-weekly advisory team meetings to establish program needs and discuss curriculum and implementation options; (3) a year-long youth co-design process to generate content ideas, pilot pieces of programming, and incorporate youth leadership through an equity lens; (4) inclusive program writing from members of socially marginalized groups; (5) program piloting to solicit feedback from teachers, facilitators, and students; and (6) collaboratively incorporating feedback. The resulting 8-session (6 hours total) Body Justice Project has both dissonance-based and media literacy foundations, with topics related to cultural appearance ideals, diet culture and non-diet nutrition, media and appearance pressure, and body autonomy. It is designed for in-class delivery to middle school students by trained college and youth co-facilitator teams. We emphasize guiding principles and lessons learned, along with next steps in implementation.


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