| Literature DB >> 26041653 |
Claire D Madigan1, Kate Jolly2, Andrea Roalfe3, Amanda L Lewis4, Laura Webber5, Paul Aveyard6, Amanda J Daley7.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Although obesity causes many adverse health consequences, modest weight loss reduces the incidence. There are effective interventions that help people to lose weight but weight regain is common and long term maintenance remains a critical challenge. As a high proportion of the population of most high and middle income countries are overweight, there are many people who would benefit from weight loss and its maintenance. Therefore, we need to find effective low cost scalable interventions to help people achieve this. One such intervention that has shown promise is regular self-weighing, to check progress against a target, however there is no trial that has tested this using a randomised controlled design (RCT). The aim of this RCT is to evaluate the effectiveness and cost effectiveness of a brief behavioural intervention delivered by non-specialist staff to promote regular self-weighing to prevent weight regain after intentional weight loss.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26041653 PMCID: PMC4453033 DOI: 10.1186/s12889-015-1869-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Public Health ISSN: 1471-2458 Impact factor: 3.295
Fig. 1CONSORT flow diagram
Intervention components using the CALO-RE behavioural change taxonomy [14]
| Behavioural technique | Definition |
|---|---|
|
| Telephonists encourage participants to set a weight goal for regain such as ‘ |
|
| Participants will be instructed to remain within 1 kg of their study baseline weight and to review their weight each day against this target. |
|
| Telephonists discuss the benefits of self-weighing with the participant. |
|
| The telephonist encourages the participant to cue this behaviour ‘ |
|
| The telephonist asks participants to describe when and where the weighing will take place. Participants will be encouraged to weigh themselves at the same time every day. |
|
| Participants receive telephone calls at weeks zero, 2 and 4 that encourage daily self-weighing, together with reminder text messages every other day for the first four weeks, reducing to twice weekly thereafter. |
|
| The telephonists offer practical solutions and give participants ideas and strategies to overcome barriers to daily self-weighing. Participants will be advised that if their current weight is more than 1 kg above target weight then they would be best to restart following the plan they followed for eating and physical activity when they were on their weight loss programme. |
|
| The telephonist asks participants if they can commit to a weight change target and to daily weighing. |
|
| The telephonist encourages the participant ‘ |
|
| Participants will be advised to weigh themselves daily and record it on the record card provided |
|
| Prompt participants to ask someone they care about to support them. Participant are advised to tell this person their goal and ask them to remind the participant of this goal and check commitment to it and whether it has been achieved every week. |
Measurements and study questionnaires at baseline and follow-ups
| Reach | ||
|---|---|---|
| Number of participants eligible | ||
| Number of participants consented | ||
| Number of participants consented and randomised | ||
| Intervention | ||
| Comparator group | Intervention group | |
| Frequency of recording self-weighing –record cards | Xa | |
| Frequency of self-weighing (objective scales) | X | |
| Psychological Measures | ||
| Index of habit strength [ | X | |
| Energy restriction [ | X | X |
| Perceptions of self-weighing [ | X | |
| Thoughts about regular weighing (open ended questions) | X | |
| Weight locus of control [ | X | X |
| Weight loss strategies | ||
| Weight control strategies (including frequency of self-weighing) [ | X | X |
| Attendance at commercial weight loss programmes & application of skills learnt at weight loss programme (open ended) | X | X |
| Open ended questions asked if participants are no longer managing their weight. | X | X |
| Intervention delivery of phone calls | Xa |
a3 month follow-up only