| Literature DB >> 32731884 |
Meigan Thomson1, Anne Martin2, Jennifer Logue3, Valerie Wells2, Sharon A Simpson2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Behavioural weight management programmes are effective in assisting people with overweight or obesity to lose excess body weight. Yet, many still struggle to attain their weight loss goals in such programmes. Little is understood about the factors which impact success in these programmes. Synthesising this data will allow for theory to be developed on how to improve success in such programmes. The main aim of this review will be to extract and synthesise the barriers and facilitators of successful weight loss during participation of behavioural weight loss programmes in adults living with overweight and obesity.Entities:
Keywords: Barriers; Behaviour change; Behavioural intervention; Facilitators; Systematic review; Weight loss
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32731884 PMCID: PMC7393897 DOI: 10.1186/s13643-020-01427-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Syst Rev ISSN: 2046-4053
Inclusion and exclusion criteria.
| PICOS domain | Inclusion | Exclusion |
|---|---|---|
| Population | 18+ years Living with overweight or obesity, defined as one of the following weight measurements: • BMI > 25 • Waist circumference (+ 88 female, + 102 males) | Pregnant women Post-surgery patients Inpatients Studies where the entire population have one of the following: • Mental health condition • Learning disability • Presence of a physical health/disease condition which could impact the content of the intervention |
| Intervention | Behavioural weight management programmes Use of behaviour change techniques Focus/goal is weight loss | Studies and interventions whose primary goal is not weight loss or have been altered to include more than a weight loss element, or are aimed at groups where the intervention would need to be adapted for use Studies only testing diet or meal replacements without a behaviour change element Studies targeting multiple health problems at once (i.e. obesity and alcohol use) Studies focusing on weight gain prevention |
| Comparator/outcomes | Weight outcomes (baseline and end of participation weights or %/kg lost) Behaviour change techniques used (explicit or described) One of the following: • Information on barriers/facilitators • Participant feedback on the intervention | |
| Study | Intervention studies Qualitative interviews Qualitative focus groups Process evaluation studies Set in Western high- and middle-income countries | Case studies Systematic reviews |
Data to be extracted from studies
| Domain | Data |
|---|---|
| Publication details | Author Year Funder |
| Participant characteristics | Age Sex Socio-economic status/income/occupation |
| Programme/intervention characteristics | Number of sessions Time period Length of each session Format of sessions (group, activities, educational, online) Behaviour change techniques used |
| Outcomes | Weight outcomes (baseline & end of programme, or amount lost) How weight is determined (measured or disclosed) How outcomes were assessed Levels of attrition Levels of adherence |
| Comparison of successful and unsuccessful | Identified barriers or facilitators (either through process evaluation data or participant feedback) Differences between successful/unsuccessful (i.e. attendance rates, social support, compliance, baseline characteristics) |