The purpose of this study is to explore the efficacy of a phone-based weight loss program that has stress management techniques integrated throughout (Weight Talk-Mindfulness). The program is targeted at employees of certain companies who meet a cut-off score on a measure of stress-related eating. The control group will receive a standard phone-based program with no additional stress management information (Weight Talk-Standard). * Hypothesis 1: Participants in Weight Talk-Mindfulness (WT-M; n=50) will experience decreases in their stress-related \& emotion-related eating compared to the Weight Talk-Standard (WT-S; n=25) group. * Hypothesis 2: The WT-M group will lose more weight compared to the WT-S control group. * Hypothesis 3: Participants in WT-M will experience decreased perceived stress, increased eating self-efficacy, increased acceptance of weight-related thoughts \& feelings and increased mindfulness compared to those in the WT-S control arm. * Hypothesis 4: Participants in WT-M will be equally as satisfied with their weight loss program as those in WT-S.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
75
Alere Wellbeing, Inc
Seattle, Washington, United States
Eating Inventory - Internal Disinhibition subscale
8 items, screens for emotion and stress-related eating habits
Time frame: Screening and 6-month follow-up
Body weight
Weight in pounds
Time frame: Screening and 6-month follow-up
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