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      An Experimental Therapeutics Test of Whether Adding Dissonance-Induction Activities Improves the Effectiveness of a Selective Obesity and Eating Disorder Prevention Program

      research-article
      , , , , Oregon Research Institute
      International journal of obesity (2005)
      prevention, overweight, obesity, eating disorders, dissonance

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          Abstract

          Objective:

          Compare the Healthy Weight obesity and eating disorder prevention program, which promotes participant-driven gradual lifestyle changes to bring energy intake and expenditure into balance, to a new intervention, Project Health, which adds activities to create cognitive dissonance about unhealthy eating, a sedentary lifestyle, and excess body fat, and an obesity education video control condition.

          Method:

          College students at risk for both outcomes because of weight concerns ( N = 364, 72% female) were randomized to condition and completed pretest, posttest, and 6, 12, and 24-month follow-up assessments.

          Results:

          Project Health participants showed significantly smaller increases in measured BMI at 1- and 2-year follow-up than both Healthy Weight participants and controls (both d = −.18), and significantly lower onset of overweight/obesity over 2-year follow-up than Healthy Weight participants and controls (13% vs. 21% and 22%). Healthy Weight and Project Health participants showed significantly greater eating disorder symptom reductions than controls through 2-year follow-up. Healthy Weight and Project Health participants showed marginally lower eating disorder onset over follow-up than controls (3% & 3% vs. 9% respectively).

          Conclusions:

          The reduced increases in BMI and future overweight/obesity onset for Project Health relative to both an active matched intervention and a minimal intervention control condition are noteworthy, especially given the short 6-hour intervention duration. The reduction in eating disorder symptoms for Healthy Weight and Project Health relative to controls was also encouraging. Results suggest that adding dissonance-induction activities increased weight loss effects. Yet, effects for both were generally small and the eating disorder onset prevention effects were only marginal, potentially because intervention groups included both sexes, which reduced eating disorder incidence and sensitivity.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          101256108
          32579
          Int J Obes (Lond)
          Int J Obes (Lond)
          International journal of obesity (2005)
          0307-0565
          1476-5497
          28 September 2018
          09 October 2017
          March 2018
          08 October 2018
          : 42
          : 3
          : 462-468
          Affiliations
          Oregon Research Institute, 1776 Millrace Drive, Eugene, Oregon, 97403, USA
          Author notes
          Correspondence to: Eric Stice, Oregon Research Institute, 1776 Millrace Drive, Eugene, Oregon, 97403, USA. estice@ 123456ori.org . Phone: (541) 484-2123. Fax: (541) 484-1108
          Article
          PMC6175285 PMC6175285 6175285 nihpa988895
          10.1038/ijo.2017.251
          6175285
          28990590
          0ea5e117-3fa8-4a16-b076-56a12ae2884d
          History
          Categories
          Article

          prevention,overweight,obesity,eating disorders,dissonance
          prevention, overweight, obesity, eating disorders, dissonance

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