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Journal ArticleDOI

How can obese weight controllers minimize weight gain during the high risk holiday season? By self-monitoring very consistently.

TLDR
Findings support the critical role of self-monitoring in weight control and demonstrate the benefits of a low-cost intervention for assisting weight controllers during the holidays.
Abstract
This study examined the efficacy of augmenting standard weekly cognitive-behavioral treatment for obesity with a self-monitoring intervention during the high risk holiday season. Fifty-seven participants in a long-term cognitive-behavioral treatment program were randomly assigned to self-monitoring intervention or comparison groups. During 2 holiday weeks (Christmas-New Years), the intervention group's treatment was supplemented with additional phone calls and daily mailings, all focused on self-monitoring. As hypothesized, the intervention group self-monitored more consistently and managed their weight better than the comparison group during the holidays. However, both groups struggled with weight management throughout the holidays. These findings support the critical role of self-monitoring in weight control and demonstrate the benefits of a low-cost intervention for assisting weight controllers during the holidays.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Ancillary study to the PREFER trial: a descriptive study of participants' patterns of self-monitoring--rationale, design and preliminary experiences.

TL;DR: Preliminary results reveal that participants frequently report recording their eating behavior during times when the binder was not opened, and unobtrusively collected electronic data can lead to the development of strategies that can promote improved adherence to self-monitoring.
Journal ArticleDOI

Treatment and Innovation: Description and Evaluation of New Programs Currently Available for Your Patients

TL;DR: In this article, the authors presented a study on obesity management and its effects on patients' health, focusing on obesity-related issues, such as diet and obesity management, and nutrition.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

Review on online and mobile weight loss management system for overcoming obesity

TL;DR: ICT's usage for weight loss management can be classified into: Diet Plan and Guideline, Online Community and Mobile Applications, which offers vast opportunities towards effective weight loss through self-monitoring which is a key success factor for weight Loss.
Journal ArticleDOI

Gourmand savants and environmental determinants of obesity.

TL;DR: It is proposed that the neuropsychiatric experience might be the most fundamental for it could help to refocus the view of obesity from ‘traditional’ environmental factors and lifestyle changes to those dominated by a more ‘individual‐centred’ perspective in which different modes of causal attribution are appropriate.
Journal Article

Patterns of interdialytic weight gain during the first year of hemodialysis.

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors describe patterns of interdialytic weight gain (IWG) over the first year of hemodialysis in 27 individuals and suggest that interventions may need to occur after the individual has been receiving treatment for 12 weeks; booster interventions may be indicated after 32 weeks.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Origins and Functions of Positive and Negative Affect: A Control-Process View.

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors examined the question of how affect arises and what affect indicates from a feedback-based view-point on self-regulation using the analogy of action control as the attempt to diminish distance to a goal, and proposed a second feedback system that senses and regulates the rate at which the action-guiding system is functioning.
Book

Losing Control: How and Why People Fail at Self-Regulation

TL;DR: In this article, the authors present a survey of self-regulation failure in social and theoretical contexts, focusing on the following: Self-Regulation Failure: Blowing It. Failure to Control Emotions and Moods.
Journal ArticleDOI

Self-control: A behavioristic excursion into the lion's den

TL;DR: The concept of self-control, until recently embedded in intrapsychic personality theories and banished from strict behavioral accounts of human activity, is considered from the perspective of a closed-loop learning paradigm as discussed by the authors.
Journal ArticleDOI

Obese people who seek treatment have different characteristics than those who do not seek treatment

TL;DR: In the matched subgroups, obese people who had sought treatment reported greater psychopathology and more binge eating than did those who had not sought treatment or did normal-weight controls.
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