Delineating the psychological and behavioural factors of successful weight loss maintenance

Overweight and obesity present alarming global health problems including detrimental health risks that call for effective interventions. Considerable research has examined behavioural and psychological factors associated with weight loss to advance the field of obesity and overweight. In line with t...

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Main Authors: Emily Levinge, Peta Stapleton, Debbie Sabot
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2020-01-01
Series:Heliyon
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2405844019367593
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spelling doaj-77fbabd44e9f4912b00c0d0d397fc6e72020-11-25T02:11:55ZengElsevierHeliyon2405-84402020-01-0161e03100Delineating the psychological and behavioural factors of successful weight loss maintenanceEmily Levinge0Peta Stapleton1Debbie Sabot2Bond University, AustraliaCorresponding author.; Bond University, AustraliaBond University, AustraliaOverweight and obesity present alarming global health problems including detrimental health risks that call for effective interventions. Considerable research has examined behavioural and psychological factors associated with weight loss to advance the field of obesity and overweight. In line with the literature, this study aimed to develop a behavioural and psychological profile based on factors of personality, eating behaviours, emotional functioning, physical well-being, and psychopathology. The sample consisted of 105 community participants who had reduced their bodyweight by at least 10% and had either successfully maintained their weight loss for a minimum 12-month period (n = 41) or had regained their weight loss within 12 months (n = 64). Participants completed an online survey comprising demographic items and four empirical measures (Mini Marker Personality Scale, Patient Health Questionnaire, Three-Factor Eating Questionnaire-Revised, and a food screening tool). Based on significant bivariate correlations results, four factors (fat intake, restrained eating, uncontrolled eating, and emotional eating) were entered into a binary logistic regression. Restrained eating was the only factor that significantly increased the likelihood of predicting successful long-term weight loss. Findings have implications for overweight and obesity future research, which may guide the direction of obesity and overweight treatments.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2405844019367593PsychologyObesityOverweightPsychologicalBehaviouralWeight maintenance
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Emily Levinge
Peta Stapleton
Debbie Sabot
spellingShingle Emily Levinge
Peta Stapleton
Debbie Sabot
Delineating the psychological and behavioural factors of successful weight loss maintenance
Heliyon
Psychology
Obesity
Overweight
Psychological
Behavioural
Weight maintenance
author_facet Emily Levinge
Peta Stapleton
Debbie Sabot
author_sort Emily Levinge
title Delineating the psychological and behavioural factors of successful weight loss maintenance
title_short Delineating the psychological and behavioural factors of successful weight loss maintenance
title_full Delineating the psychological and behavioural factors of successful weight loss maintenance
title_fullStr Delineating the psychological and behavioural factors of successful weight loss maintenance
title_full_unstemmed Delineating the psychological and behavioural factors of successful weight loss maintenance
title_sort delineating the psychological and behavioural factors of successful weight loss maintenance
publisher Elsevier
series Heliyon
issn 2405-8440
publishDate 2020-01-01
description Overweight and obesity present alarming global health problems including detrimental health risks that call for effective interventions. Considerable research has examined behavioural and psychological factors associated with weight loss to advance the field of obesity and overweight. In line with the literature, this study aimed to develop a behavioural and psychological profile based on factors of personality, eating behaviours, emotional functioning, physical well-being, and psychopathology. The sample consisted of 105 community participants who had reduced their bodyweight by at least 10% and had either successfully maintained their weight loss for a minimum 12-month period (n = 41) or had regained their weight loss within 12 months (n = 64). Participants completed an online survey comprising demographic items and four empirical measures (Mini Marker Personality Scale, Patient Health Questionnaire, Three-Factor Eating Questionnaire-Revised, and a food screening tool). Based on significant bivariate correlations results, four factors (fat intake, restrained eating, uncontrolled eating, and emotional eating) were entered into a binary logistic regression. Restrained eating was the only factor that significantly increased the likelihood of predicting successful long-term weight loss. Findings have implications for overweight and obesity future research, which may guide the direction of obesity and overweight treatments.
topic Psychology
Obesity
Overweight
Psychological
Behavioural
Weight maintenance
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2405844019367593
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