Over 70% of U.S. adults have overweight or obesity. Currently, the most efficacious behavioral intervention for obesity is standard behavioral treatment (SBT), often composed of group sessions, calorie goals, and physical activity goals. With this approach, participants often lose 8-10% of the person's baseline weight, and also decrease risk for cardiovascular disease. Long-term weight loss, however, is limited; many participants return to baseline weight within five years following treatment. One reason SBT may not create long-term weight loss may be due to treatment components that teach participants to rely on external methods for changing eating decisions (e.g., counting calories, restricting certain foods), rather than internal cues of hunger and satiety. Because individuals with obesity report significant challenges with adhering to these cues, augmenting behavioral interventions with appetite self-regulation training may be a solution. Thus, the investigator propose to examine the feasibility and acceptability of a 6-month remotely-delivered appetite regulation + lifestyle modification intervention to treat obesity.
Aim 1. Using a single-arm design, the investigator will examine the feasibility and acceptability of a 6-month, remotely-delivered, appetite self-regulation intervention for weight loss maintenance. Aim 2. Examine the preliminary efficacy of the intervention on weight maintenance at 4 and 6 months.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
NA
Purpose
SCREENING
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
31
The intervention will consist of content from Appetite Awareness Training (AAT), a cognitive-behavioral intervention to promote intuitive eating and the Diabetes Prevention Program (DPP)20, a behavioral lifestyle intervention. The goal of AAT is to enable participants to relearn their stomach's hunger signals and begin to obey and monitor functions of satiety. AAT has been successful in helping participants to reduce binge and overeating. Participants are taught to respond to external cues to eat (e.g., social gatherings), self-monitor the participant's adherence to biological signals of hunger and satiety, and to develop appropriate coping skills to manage urges to eat when not physically hungry.
UNC-Chapel Hill
Chapel Hill, North Carolina, United States
Feasibility (Recruitment): Total Number of Eligible Adults Enrolled in the Study
Recruitment is defined as the number of potential eligible adults screened for the study versus the number of persons who enrolled in the study.
Time frame: 3 Months
Feasibility (Retention): Percentage of Participants Retained in the Study
Percentage of eligible participants who were enrolled and retained in the study through the 6 months.
Time frame: 3 months
Feasibility (Retention): Percentage of Participants Retained in the Study
Percentage of eligible participants who were enrolled and retained in the study through the 6 months.
Time frame: 6 months
Feasibility (Attendance): Percentage of Intervention Sessions Attended
Percentage of intervention sessions attended for the duration of the study by each participant.
Time frame: 3 months
Change in weight regain
Participant body weight will be measured by trained research staff using calibrated digital scales, with participants in light indoor clothing, with pockets emptied and belts and shoes removed.
Time frame: 3 months
Change in weight regain
Participant body weight will be measured by trained research staff using calibrated scales with participants in light indoor clothing, with pockets emptied and belts and shoes removed.
Time frame: 6 months
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