Alpert Medical School of Brown University, Miriam Hospital, Providence, RI 02903, USA.
Gillings School of Global Public Health, University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill, Chapel Hill, NC 27599, USA.
Transl Behav Med. 2021 Dec 14;11(12):2081-2090. doi: 10.1093/tbm/ibab099.
Knowledge of participant treatment preferences can inform decision-making regarding treatment dissemination and future participant adoption. To compare participant perceptions of two evidence-based approaches for weight gain prevention in young adults to identify the intervention with the greatest likelihood of adoption. As part of a randomized trial (Study of Novel Approaches to Weight Gain Prevention [SNAP]; n = 599) testing weight gain prevention interventions in young adults (18-35 years), individuals assigned to self-regulation interventions using either large changes or small changes reported on perceived personal effectiveness and difficulty of treatment over 3 years. Treatment satisfaction at 2-year follow-up was also reported. Pre-randomization, participants believed the large change intervention would be more personally effective than the small change intervention, although they also considered it more complex. Older age, lower body mass index (p = 0.056), and desire to maintain versus lose weight predicted greater perceived effectiveness of the small change relative to large change intervention. Over follow-up, the large change intervention was no longer perceived as more effective, but perceived effectiveness aligned with assigned treatment. The small change intervention was rated as less complex than the large change intervention at 4 months, but not at other follow-ups. At study conclusion, participants were largely satisfied with both treatments; however, in the small change intervention, individuals who were not successful at preventing weight gain were less satisfied than individuals who were successful. The large and small change interventions are both appropriate for dissemination with no clear advantages based on the participant perceptions.
了解参与者的治疗偏好可以为治疗传播和未来参与者的采用提供信息。为了比较两种基于证据的青年人体重增加预防方法的参与者感知,以确定最有可能被采用的干预措施。作为一项针对年轻人(18-35 岁)的体重增加预防干预措施的随机试验(新型体重增加预防方法研究 [SNAP];n=599)的一部分,参与者被分配到使用大变化或小变化的自我调节干预措施,他们报告了 3 年来治疗的感知个人效果和难度。还报告了 2 年随访时的治疗满意度。在随机分组前,参与者认为大变化干预比小变化干预更能个人有效,尽管他们也认为它更复杂。年龄较大、体重指数较低(p=0.056)以及保持体重与减轻体重的愿望预测了小变化相对于大变化干预的更大感知效果。在随访期间,大变化干预不再被认为更有效,但感知效果与分配的治疗相符。在 4 个月时,小变化干预被认为比大变化干预更不复杂,但在其他随访时并非如此。在研究结束时,参与者对两种治疗都基本满意;然而,在小变化干预中,未能成功预防体重增加的个体比成功的个体满意度更低。大变化和小变化干预都适合传播,基于参与者的感知,没有明显的优势。