“…The most effective and well-studied eating disorder prevention programs, cognitive dissonance programs (Stice et al, 2013), have been shown to reduce thin-ideal internalization and disordered eating in non-clinical and clinical samples of adolescent girls (e.g., Becker, Bull, Schaumberg, Cauble, & Franco, 2008; Becker, Smith, & Ciao, 2006; Coughlin & Kalodner, 2006; Stice et al, 2013; Stice, Rohde, Butryn, Menke, & Marti, 2015; Yamamiya et al, 2005). These prevention programs focus on changing interpretations of beauty ideals by providing psychoeducation on the realities of images presented in the media (e.g., digital editing of body sizes) and asking participants to engage in writing and other activities that actively argue against the thin-ideal.…”