Description
There is a growing body of research exploring the effectiveness of yoga as a pathway to positive embodiment for those at-risk for and struggling with eating disorders. This book provides a comprehensive look at the state of the field.
This book begins with an introduction to positive embodiment, eating disorders, and yoga. It also offers insights into the personal journey of each of the editors as they share what brought them to this work. The first section of this book explores the empirical and conceptual rationale for approaching eating disorder prevention and treatment through the lens of embodiment and yoga. The next section of the text integrates the history of embodiment theory as related to yoga and eating disorders, provides the logic model for change and guidance for researchers, and offers a critical social justice perceptive of the work to date. The third section addresses the efficacy of yoga in the prevention and treatment of eating disorders including a comprehensive review and meta-analysis as well as five research studies demonstrating the various approaches to exploring the preventative and therapeutic effects of yoga for disordered eating. The final section of this book closes with a chapter on future directions and offers guidance for what is next in both practice and research.
The chapters in this book were originally published as a special edition of Eating Disorders: The Journal of Treatment & Prevention.
Table of Contents
1. Introduction
Dianne Neumark-Sztainer, Catherine Cook-Cottone, Tracy L. Tylka, and Anne E. Cox
Theoretical and empirical considerations
2. Eating disorders, embodiment, and yoga: a conceptual overview
Iris Perey and Catherine Cook-Cottone
3. Yoga and the experience of embodiment: a discussion of possible links
Niva Piran and Dianne Neumark-Sztainer
4. Realizing Yoga’s all-access pass: a social justice critique of westernized yoga and inclusive embodiment
Jennifer B. Webb, Courtney B. Rogers, and Erin Vinoski Thomas
5. A conceptual model describing mechanisms for how yoga practice may support positive embodiment
Anne E. Cox and Tracy L. Tylka
Research update
6. Yoga and eating disorder prevention and treatment: a comprehensive review and meta-analysis
Ashlye Borden and Catherine Cook-Cottone
7. Benefits of yoga in the treatment of eating disorders: results of a randomized controlled trial
Margaret A. Brennan, William J. Whelton, and Donald Sharpe
8. Examining the effects of mindfulness-based yoga instruction on positive embodiment and affective responses
Anne E. Cox, Sarah Ullrich-French, Catherine Cook-Cottone, Tracy L. Tylka, and Dianne Neumark-Sztainer
9. A yoga-based therapy program designed to improve body image among an outpatient eating disordered population: program description and results from a mixed-methods pilot study
Lisa Diers, Sarah A. Rydell, Allison Watts, and Dianne Neumark-Sztainer
10. Yoga practice in a college sample: associated changes in eating disorder, body image, and related factors over time
Rachel Kramer and Kelly Cuccolo
11. Yoga’s impact on risk and protective factors for disordered eating: a pilot prevention trial
CR Pacanowski, L Diers, RD Crosby, M Mackenzie, and D. Neumark-Sztainer
Future directions
12. Future directions for research on yoga and positive embodiment
Catherine Cook-Cottone, Anne Elizabeth Cox, Dianne Neumark-Sztainer, and Tracy L. Tylka



