Abstract

BackgroundThis paper describes the systematic development of an intervention for the prevention of obesity among overweight adults. Its development was guided by the six steps of Intervention Mapping (IM), in which the establishment of program needs, objectives and methods is followed by development of the intervention and an implementation and evaluation plan.MethodsWeight gain prevention can be achieved by making small changes in dietary intake (DI) or physical activity (PA). The intervention objectives, derived from self-regulation theory, were to establish goal-oriented behaviour. They were translated into a computer-tailored Internet-delivered intervention consisting of four modules. The intervention includes strategies to target the main determinants of self-regulation, such as feedback and action planning.The first module is intended to ensure adults' commitment to preventing weight gain, choosing behaviour change and action initiation. The second and third modules are intended to evaluate behaviour change, and to adapt action and coping plans. The fourth module is intended to maintain self-regulation of body weight without use of the program.The intervention is being evaluated for its efficacy in an RCT, whose protocol is described in this paper. Primary outcomes are weight, waist circumference and skin-fold thickness. Other outcomes are DI, PA, cognitive mediators and self-regulation skills.DiscussionThe IM protocol helped us integrating insights from various theories. The performance objectives and methods were guided by self-regulation theory but empirical evidence with regard to the effectiveness of theoretical methods was limited. Sometimes, feasibility issues made it necessary to deviate from the original, theory-based plans. With this paper, we provide transparency with regard to intervention development and evaluation.Trial registrationNTR1862

Highlights

  • This paper describes the systematic development of an intervention for the prevention of obesity among overweight adults

  • Overweight adults (BMI 25-30 kg/m2) are an especially important group to target with obesity prevention interventions: are they most at risk of becoming van Genugten et al BMC Public Health 2010, 10:649 http://www.biomedcentral.com/1471-2458/10/649 obese, they comprise a large group

  • Step 3 Theory-Based Methods and Practical strategies In step 3 we identified and selected theoretical methods for modifying the important determinants and achieving the change objectives (COs)

Read more

Summary

Introduction

This paper describes the systematic development of an intervention for the prevention of obesity among overweight adults. Overweight adults (BMI 25-30 kg/m2) are an especially important group to target with obesity prevention interventions: are they most at risk of becoming van Genugten et al BMC Public Health 2010, 10:649 http://www.biomedcentral.com/1471-2458/10/649 obese, they comprise a large group. There is a lack of well designed, theory and evidencebased interventions that focus on weight-management among adults being overweight. Such an intervention should be able to reach a large group of overweight adults and has to take the large differences between people in their behaviours, preferences and capabilities into account. We initiated a project to develop and evaluate such an intervention

Objectives
Methods
Findings
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call