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Self-regulatory and self-efficacy mechanisms of weight loss in women within a community-based behavioral obesity treatment.

Authors :
Annesi, James J.
Stewart, Francine A.
Source :
Journal of Behavioral Medicine. Oct2024, Vol. 47 Issue 5, p900-912. 13p.
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

Given the traditional methods of treating obesity through education on controlling eating and increasing exercise have largely failed beyond the very short term, a more intensive focus on psychosocial correlates of those weight-loss behaviors has been suggested. Multiple behavioral theories incorporate self-regulation, self-efficacy, and mood; however, their interrelations and effects over both the short and long term within cognitive-behavioral obesity treatments remain unclear. Within a novel community-based program with women with obesity who had either low (n = 29) or high (n = 71) mood disturbance scores, there were significant improvements in exercise- and eating-related self-regulation and eating-related self-efficacy—primary targets of that intervention—with no significant difference in those changes by mood disturbance grouping. Changes in the summed exercise- and eating-related self-regulation scores significantly mediated relationships between changes in eating-related self-efficacy and weight (over both 6 and 12 months). There were similar results with mediation assessed via the extent exercise-related self-regulation carried over to eating-related self-regulation. In both of those models a reciprocal relationship between self-regulation and self-efficacy changes was indicated. In serial multiple mediation equations, paths of changes in exercise-related self-regulation → eating-related self-regulation → eating-related self-efficacy → weight were significant. However, paths were not significant when change in self-efficacy was entered as the predictor (initial) variable. Findings suggest viability in first focusing on exercise-related self-regulation, then eating-related self-regulation, in the course of increasing self-efficacy and probabilities for inducing enough sustained weight loss to improve obesity-associated health risks. Benefits of field-based research findings generalizing to weight-management applications were suggested. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
01607715
Volume :
47
Issue :
5
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Journal of Behavioral Medicine
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
179358488
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1007/s10865-024-00494-2