Literature DB >> 24003590

Moderation of age, sex, and ethnicity on psychosocial predictors of increased exercise and improved eating.

James J Annesi1.   

Abstract

Although research indicates that treatment-induced improvements in self-regulation, mood, and self-efficacy significantly predict increased exercise and improved eating, moderation by participants' personal characteristics is largely unknown. Severely obese adults (N = 414; 47% White, 53% African American) volunteered for a behavioral exercise and nutrition treatment and demonstrated significant within-group improvements in self-efficacy for exercise, self-regulation for exercise, mood, self-efficacy for controlled eating, self-regulation for controlled eating, exercise volume, and fruit and vegetable intake over 26 weeks. After testing age, sex, and race/ethnicity as possible moderators of the prediction of changes in exercise volume and fruit and vegetable consumption by changes in self-regulation, mood, and self-efficacy, only age significantly moderated change in volume of exercise. Implications for theory and treatment were discussed.

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Year:  2013        PMID: 24003590     DOI: 10.1080/00223980.2012.711785

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Psychol        ISSN: 0022-3980


  1 in total

1.  Weight Loss and the Prevention of Weight Regain: Evaluation of a Treatment Model of Exercise Self-Regulation Generalizing to Controlled Eating.

Authors:  James J Annesi; Ping H Johnson; Gisèle A Tennant; Kandice J Porter; Kristin L Mcewen
Journal:  Perm J       Date:  2016-02-01
  1 in total

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