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Clinical Impairment Assessment (CIA 3.0)

CIA 3.0: Clinical Impairment Assessment. Reflect on the past 28 days and rate how much your eating habits, shape, or weight have affected your life.

Past 4 Weeks Assessment (0/16)

1. Eating habits made you feel unhappy

2. Eating habits made it difficult to concentrate

3. Eating habits made you feel ashamed

4. Weight/shape made you feel unhappy

5. Weight/shape made it difficult to concentrate

6. Weight/shape made you feel ashamed

7. Weight/shape made you feel isolated

8. Weight/shape interfered with your work/education

9. Eating habits interfered with your work/education

10. Eating habits made you feel isolated

11. Weight/shape made you feel worthless

12. Weight/shape made it difficult to enjoy social activities

13. Eating habits made it difficult to enjoy social activities

14. Weight/shape made it difficult to spend time with people

15. Weight/shape interfered with your relationships

16. Eating habits interfered with your relationships

Guidelines & Evidence

Clinical Details

Section 1

When to Use

When to Use

Assessment of psychosocial impairment related to eating disorder psychopathology
Differential evaluation of impairment in Personal, Social, and Cognitive domains
Complimenting symptom-based measures (e.g., EDE-Q) to understand functional impact
Monitoring recovery and return-to-function in eating disorder clinics
Section 2

Formula & Logic

Scoring Logic

The CIA consists of 16 items focusing on the past 28 days. Each item is rated from 0 (Not at all) to 3 (A lot). Total score ranges from 0 to 48. Higher scores indicate greater levels of clinical impairment.

Clinical Ranges

≥ 16 pointsClinically significant impairment
Personal DomainItems 1, 2, 3, 4, 11, 15, 16
Social DomainItems 5, 6, 7, 10, 14
Cognitive DomainItems 8, 9, 12, 13
Section 3

Evidence Appraisal

Validation

The Measurement of Impairment Due to Eating Disorder Psychopathology.

Bohn K et al. • Behav Res Ther.. 2008;46(10):1105-10. Original derivation and validation of the CIA as a robust transdiagnostic measure.

The Clinical Impairment Assessment (CIA): Measurement invariance and clinical utility.

Vannucci A et al. • Int J Eat Disord.. 2012;Confirmed the ≥16 cut-off for identifying significant distress in treatment-seeking populations.

Last Comprehensive Review: 2026

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