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Review
. 2022 Jun 29;26(2):98-117.
doi: 10.7812/TPP/21.212. Epub 2022 Jun 20.

Behavioral Weight Loss and Maintenance: A 25-Year Research Program Informing Innovative Programming

Affiliations
Review

Behavioral Weight Loss and Maintenance: A 25-Year Research Program Informing Innovative Programming

James J Annesi. Perm J. .

Abstract

Introduction Behavioral interventions targeting sustained weight loss have largely failed for decades, with little chance of improvement using prevailing methods. Objective To address treatment limitations, a focused 25-year research program was reviewed through the lens of social cognitive theory, probative investigations, and original predictive models. Innovative, but evidence-based, treatment suggestions were sought. Results Task 1 of the research program addressed adherence to exercise, a well-established requirement for maintained weight loss. A culminating model addressing this treatment aspect suggested that interrelations among changes in self-regulatory skills usage, self-efficacy, and mood should guide exercise-support programming. Task 2 attached an eating-behavior change component and probed for malleable psychosocial variables predictive of success over the weight-loss phase (initial 6 months after treatment initiation). After thorough evaluation of selected theory- and research-driven psychosocial variables, changes in self-regulation, self-efficacy, and mood were again deemed to be the most salient predictors driving eating change. In Task 3, treatment foci related to changes in the 3 psychosocial variables were supported into the weight-loss maintenance phase (beyond 6 months), and the carry-over of changes in self-regulation and self-efficacy from exercise- to eating-related contexts was identified and leveraged. Task 4 suggested value in additionally addressing emotional eating as a distinct factor. Conclusion Suggestions informing principles and extensions of a treatment approach previously demonstrating atypically high degrees of success with maintaining weight loss in field- and community-based settings are provided. Those methods emanate from the reviewed research program, which shaped novel procedures to leverage exercise-induced psychosocial changes for their carry-over benefits for controlling eating.

Keywords: Cognitive-Behavioral; Exercise; Obesity; Self-Regulation; Treatment; Weight Loss.

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Conflict of interest statement

Conflicts of Interest: None declared

Figures

Figure 1:
Figure 1:
Research program-related evolution of predictive models for exercise adherence. Δ = change in the designated construct.
Figure 2:
Figure 2:
Overarching philosophy shaping treatment curricula.
Figure 3:
Figure 3:
Path model toward change in body mass index incorporating factors derived from social cognitive theory and Baker and Brownell’s predictive model.
Figure 4:
Figure 4:
Proposed pathways toward weight loss through treatment-associated changes in self-regulation, self-efficacy, and mood carried over from exercise to eating contexts. Adapted with permission from: Annesi JJ. Supported exercise improves controlled eating and weight through its effects on psychosocial factors: extending a systematic research program toward treatment development. Perm J 2012;16(1):7–18. doi:10.7812/11-136.
Figure 5:
Figure 5:
Causal chain predicting weight loss and weight-loss maintenance through psychosocial mediators and moderators. Adapted with permission from: Annesi JJ. Sequential changes advancing from exercise-induced psychological improvements to controlled eating and sustained weight loss: a treatment-focused causal chain model. Perm J 2020;24:19.235. doi:10.7812/TPP/19.235. Δ= change in the designated construct; a = path a (predictor → mediator); b = path b (mediator → outcome); c′ = path c′ (predictor → outcome, controlling for the mediator); Eat = for eating; Ex = for exercise; SE = self-efficacy; SR = self-regulation. The proposed sequence of interrelations among variables is represented with labels from 1 to 7.

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