| Literature DB >> 25279285 |
Gretchen E Ames1, Colleen S Thomas2, Roshni H Patel1, Jillian S McMullen1, Lesley D Lutes3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Attrition is a problem among patients who participate in commercial weight loss programs. One possible explanation is that if patients are unable to reach a weight that they expect to achieve, they may be more likely to drop out of treatment. This study investigated variables associated with attrition among 30 obese patients who completed a liquid meal replacement program (LMR) and enrolled in a 52-week Small Changes Maintenance intervention (SCM). Patients lost a median 18% of body weight during LMR and completed assessments about weight expectations and weight satisfaction pre- and post-SCM.Entities:
Keywords: Attrition; Obesity treatment; Weight loss expectations
Year: 2014 PMID: 25279285 PMCID: PMC4164670 DOI: 10.1186/2193-1801-3-477
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Springerplus ISSN: 2193-1801
Comparison of attrition rates during the Small Changes Maintenance intervention (SCM) according to pre-SCM variables
| Pre-SCM Variables a | Fraction (%) of patients lost to attrition | OR (95% CI) | P-value b |
|---|---|---|---|
| Percent of weight lost during LMR | 0.035 | ||
| ≤18.2% | 7/15 (47%) | 12.25 (1.27-118.36) | |
| >18.2% | 1/15 (7%) | 1.00 (reference) | |
| Expected weight loss | 0.040 | ||
| 0-6.8 kg | 1/14 (7%) | 1.00 (reference) | |
| 9.1-22.7 kg | 7/16 (44%) | 10.11 (1.05-97.00) | |
| Number of months expected to achieve weight loss goalc | 1.00 | ||
| 1-9 | 4/14 (29%) | 1.47 (0.26-8.23) | |
| 10-12 | 3/14 (21%) | 1.00 (reference) | |
| Weight satisfaction | 0.040 | ||
| 1-7 | 7/16 (44%) | 10.11 (1.05-97.00) | |
| 8-9 | 1/14 (7%) | 1.00 (reference) |
Abbreviations: SCM Small Changes Maintenance, OR odds ratio, CI confidence interval, LMR liquid meal replacement.
aGrouping of pre-SCM characteristics was based on the sample median.
bP-values result from Fisher’s exact test owing to the small number of events.
cTwo patients did not expect to lose more weight.
Figure 1Changes in expected weight loss before and after the Small Changes Maintenance intervention (SCM) among 22 participants who completed SCM. Solid lines represent the 16 participants who gained weight and dashed lines represent the 6 patients who either maintained their weight or lost weight during the 52-week intervention. To minimize overlap of data points, expected weight loss was jittered vertically (within .9 kg) by the same amount for pre- and post SCM.