Teixeira Pedro J, Going Scott B, Houtkooper Linda B, Cussler Ellen C, Metcalfe Lauve L, Blew Rob M, Sardinha Luis B, Lohman Timothy G
Department of Exercise and Health, Faculty of Human Movement, Technical University of Lisbon, Lisbon, Portugal.
Med Sci Sports Exerc. 2006 Jan;38(1):179-88. doi: 10.1249/01.mss.0000180906.10445.8d.
This study investigated changes in psychosocial variables related to exercise, eating, and body image during a weight reduction program and evaluated their association with weight loss in middle-aged overweight and obese women up to 1 yr after intervention.
The 136 participants (age, 48.1 +/- 4.4 yr; weight, 30.6 +/- 5.6 kg x m(-2)) who completed the 4-month lifestyle weight reduction program (86% retention), losing -6.2 +/- 4.6% (P < 0.001) of their initial weight, were followed up for 12 additional months. Of these, 82% completed 16-month assessments (weight change, -5.5 +/- 7.7%, P < 0.001). Psychosocial variables were assessed by validated instruments in standardized conditions at baseline and after the intervention (4 months).
Compared with 4-month assessments, body weight did not change at 16 months (P > 0.09). Changes in eating restraint, disinhibition, and hunger; exercise, self-efficacy, and intrinsic motivation; body shape concerns; and physical self-worth were associated with weight change at 4 months (P < 0.001, except hunger, P < 0.05). Baseline-adjusted 4-month scores in all psychosocial variables also predicted weight change from baseline to 16 months (P < 0.01), except hunger (P > 0.05). After controlling for 4-month weight change and other covariates, increases in exercise intrinsic motivation remained predictive of weight loss at 16 months (P < 0.05). Multiple linear regression showed that eating variables were significant and independent correlates of short-term weight change, whereas changes in exercise variables were stronger predictors of longer term weight outcomes.
Results highlight the importance of cognitive processes during weight control and support the notion that initial focus on diet is associated with short-term weight loss, while change in exercise-related motivational factors, with a special emphasis on intrinsic sources of motivation (e.g., interest and enjoyment in exercise), play a more important role in longer term weight management.
本研究调查了中年超重和肥胖女性在减肥计划期间与运动、饮食和身体形象相关的心理社会变量的变化,并评估了这些变量在干预后长达1年的时间里与体重减轻的关联。
136名参与者(年龄48.1±4.4岁;体重30.6±5.6 kg·m⁻²)完成了为期4个月的生活方式减肥计划(保留率86%),初始体重减轻了6.2±4.6%(P<0.001),随后又进行了12个月的随访。其中,82%的参与者完成了16个月的评估(体重变化为-5.5±7.7%,P<0.001)。心理社会变量在基线和干预后(4个月)的标准化条件下通过经过验证的工具进行评估。
与4个月评估相比,16个月时体重没有变化(P>0.09)。饮食克制、去抑制和饥饿感的变化;运动、自我效能感和内在动机的变化;对身体形状的关注;以及身体自我价值感的变化与4个月时的体重变化相关(除饥饿感外,P<0.001;饥饿感P<0.05)。所有心理社会变量的基线调整后4个月得分也预测了从基线到16个月的体重变化(P<0.01),饥饿感除外(P>0.05)。在控制了4个月的体重变化和其他协变量后,运动内在动机的增加在16个月时仍可预测体重减轻(P<0.05)。多元线性回归显示,饮食变量是短期体重变化的显著且独立的相关因素,而运动变量的变化是长期体重结果的更强预测因素。
研究结果突出了体重控制过程中认知过程的重要性,并支持以下观点:最初关注饮食与短期体重减轻相关,而与运动相关的动机因素的变化,特别强调内在动机来源(如对运动的兴趣和享受),在长期体重管理中发挥更重要的作用。