MRC Epidemiology Unit, University of Cambridge, Cambridge, UK.
School of Clinical Medicine, University of Cambridge, Cambridge, UK.
Int J Qual Stud Health Well-being. 2022 Dec;17(1):2123093. doi: 10.1080/17482631.2022.2123093.
We aimed to explore participants' experiences of mental health during an acceptance and commitment therapy (ACT)-based guided self-help intervention to support weight management in adults with overweight or obesity during the COVID-19 pandemic (SWiM-C: Supporting Weight Management during COVID-19).
We conducted semi-structured telephone interviews with twenty participants and used reflexive thematic analysis to identify patterns of meaning across the dataset relevant to mental health.
Four themes were conceptualized: i) Mental health changes associated with SWiM-C, ii) External factors negatively impacted mental health and intervention engagement, iii) Use and impact of coping responses, and iv) Intervention preferences based on psychological needs.
Findings suggest that participants were exposed to multiple factors, both related to and external to the intervention, that negatively impact their mental health, yet ACT-based aspects of the SWiM-C intervention appeared to support participants to adaptively manage the decline in their mental health. The findings can be used to inform the development of future weight management interventions, such as through intervention personalization and the inclusion of more strategies that target emotional regulation.: ISRCTN 12107048, https://www.isrctn.com/ISRCTN12107048.
本研究旨在探索参与者在接受和承诺疗法(ACT)为基础的自我帮助干预措施期间的心理健康体验,该干预措施旨在支持 COVID-19 大流行期间超重或肥胖成年人的体重管理(SWiM-C:支持 COVID-19 期间的体重管理)。
我们对 20 名参与者进行了半结构式电话访谈,并使用反思性主题分析来识别与心理健康相关的数据集的模式。
我们提出了四个主题:i)与 SWiM-C 相关的心理健康变化,ii)外部因素对心理健康和干预参与产生负面影响,iii)应对反应的使用和影响,以及 iv)基于心理需求的干预偏好。
研究结果表明,参与者面临多种因素的影响,这些因素既与干预有关,也与干预无关,这些因素对他们的心理健康产生负面影响,但 SWiM-C 干预的基于 ACT 的方面似乎支持参与者适应地管理心理健康的下降。这些发现可以用于为未来的体重管理干预措施提供信息,例如通过干预个性化和纳入更多针对情绪调节的策略。注册号:ISRCTN 12107048,https://www.isrctn.com/ISRCTN12107048。