Arnold School of Public Health, University of South Carolina, Columbia, South Carolina.
Department of Preventive Medicine, University of Tennessee Health Sciences Center, Memphis, Tennessee.
Am J Prev Med. 2020 Aug;59(2):237-246. doi: 10.1016/j.amepre.2020.03.015. Epub 2020 May 21.
Internet-delivered behavioral weight control is promising for expanding the reach and availability of weight management, but online programs produce lower weight losses than typically achieved in person. Financial incentives have been shown to increase weight losses. This study examined whether adding financial incentives for self-monitoring and achieving target weight losses increases weight losses attained in a fully online, group-based behavioral weight management program compared with the same program alone.
This study was an RCT.
SETTING/PARTICIPANTS: Adults with overweight and obesity (n=418; 91% female; 28% minority) were recruited from 2 clinical centers.
The intervention was a 24-session online group-based behavioral weight control program with weekly synchronous chat sessions (Internet-only) or the same program with weekly financial incentives for self-monitoring body weight and dietary intake daily and for achieving target weight losses at 2 and 6 months (Internet + incentives).
This study measured weight loss at 6 months and treatment engagement (attendance, self-monitoring of body weight, dietary intake, and physical activity). Data were collected between February 2016 and August 2018, and analyses were completed in 2019.
Participants randomized to the Internet + incentives group lost more weight (-6.4 [SD=5.5] kg) than those in the Internet-only group (-4.7 [SD=6.6] kg; p<0.01). Further, a higher proportion of the Internet + incentives group achieved ≥5% weight loss (55%) than those in the Internet-only group (40%; p<0.05). Treatment engagement was higher in the Internet + incentives condition, with greater self-monitoring of behaviors targeted by incentives, as well as higher rates of behaviors not targeted and higher self-reported physical activity. Study retention was higher among those in the Internet + incentives condition (91%) than those in the Internet-only condition (81%; p=0.003).
Adding financial incentives to a program delivered fully online increases weight losses compared with the program alone and can achieve weight losses comparable to in-person programs, offering potential for substantial geographic reach.
This study is registered at www.clinicaltrials.gov NCT02688621.
互联网提供的行为体重控制有望扩大体重管理的范围和可及性,但在线项目的体重减轻效果不如通常在个人环境中实现的效果好。已证明经济激励措施可以增加体重减轻。本研究旨在探讨自我监测和达到目标体重减轻的经济激励措施是否会增加完全在线的基于小组的行为体重管理计划中的体重减轻,与仅使用相同程序相比。
这是一项 RCT 研究。
地点/参与者:从 2 个临床中心招募了超重和肥胖的成年人(n=418;91%为女性;28%为少数族裔)。
干预措施是一个 24 节的在线小组行为体重控制计划,每周进行一次同步聊天会议(仅互联网)或相同的计划,每周对自我监测体重和饮食摄入进行经济奖励,每天进行,并且在 2 个月和 6 个月时达到目标体重减轻(互联网+奖励)。
本研究在 6 个月时测量体重减轻,并评估治疗参与度(出勤率、体重自我监测、饮食摄入和身体活动)。数据收集于 2016 年 2 月至 2018 年 8 月之间进行,分析于 2019 年完成。
随机分配到互联网+奖励组的参与者体重减轻更多(-6.4 [SD=5.5] kg),而仅接受互联网组的参与者体重减轻较少(-4.7 [SD=6.6] kg;p<0.01)。此外,互联网+奖励组中达到≥5%体重减轻的比例(55%)高于仅接受互联网组的比例(40%;p<0.05)。在互联网+奖励条件下,治疗参与度更高,针对奖励目标的行为自我监测更多,未针对的行为比率更高,自我报告的身体活动更多。在互联网+奖励条件下的研究保留率(91%)高于仅接受互联网组的保留率(81%;p=0.003)。
与单独使用程序相比,向完全在线提供的程序添加经济奖励可增加体重减轻,并可实现与面对面程序相当的体重减轻,为广泛的地理覆盖范围提供了潜力。
本研究在 www.clinicaltrials.gov 上注册,NCT02688621。