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Using goal setting as a strategy for dietary behavior change.

TLDR
Because interventions using goal setting appear to promote dietary change, dietitians should consider incorporating the goal-setting strategies to enhance the behavior change process in nutrition education programs.
Abstract
Recent reviews have noted that behavioral theory-based nutrition education programs are more successful at achieving food behavior change than knowledge-based programs and that a clear understanding of the mechanisms of behavior change procedures enable dietetics professionals to more effectively promote change. Successful dietary behavior change programs target 1 or more of the personal, behavioral, or environmental factors that influence the behavior of interest and apply theory-based strategies to influence or change those factors. Goal setting is a strategy that is frequently used to help people change. A 4-step goal-setting process has been identified: recognizing a need for change; establishing a goal; adopting a goal-directed activity and self-monitoring it; and self-rewarding goal attainment. The applications of goal setting in dietary interventions for adults and children are reviewed here. Because interventions using goal setting appear to promote dietary change, dietitians should consider incorporating the goal-setting strategies to enhance the behavior change process in nutrition education programs.

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Citations
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Playing for Real: Video Games and Stories for Health-Related Behavior Change

TL;DR: Research is needed on the optimal use of game-based stories, fantasy, interactivity, and behavior change technology in promoting health-related behavior change.
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Are Current Health Behavioral Change Models Helpful in Guiding Prevention of Weight Gain Efforts

TL;DR: Although each model has something to offer obesity prevention, the early promise can be achieved only with substantial additional research in which these models are applied to diet and physical activity in regard to obesity.
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Goal setting as a strategy for dietary and physical activity behavior change: a review of the literature.

TL;DR: Although, goal setting is widely used with children and adolescents in nutrition interventions, its effectiveness has yet to be reported and methodological issues still need to be resolved.
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The Fun, Food, and Fitness Project (FFFP): the Baylor GEMS pilot study.

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Goal-setting for behavior change in primary care: An exploration and status report

TL;DR: Evidence that goal-setting is superior to other behavior change methods has not been shown and primary care practices can benefit from information on how best to implement this innovation.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Goal setting and task performance: 1969–1980.

TL;DR: A review of both laboratory and field studies on the effect of setting goals when learning or performing a task found that specific, challenging goals led more often to higher performance than easy goals, 'do your best' goals or no goals as discussed by the authors.
Journal ArticleDOI

Toward a theory of task motivation and incentives

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors summarized and integrated research concerned with a long-neglected topic in psychology: the relationship between conscious goals and intentions and task performance, and concluded that any adequate theory of task motivation must take account of the individual's conscious intentions and intentions.
Journal ArticleDOI

Playing for Real: Video Games and Stories for Health-Related Behavior Change

TL;DR: Research is needed on the optimal use of game-based stories, fantasy, interactivity, and behavior change technology in promoting health-related behavior change.
Journal ArticleDOI

Are Current Health Behavioral Change Models Helpful in Guiding Prevention of Weight Gain Efforts

TL;DR: Although each model has something to offer obesity prevention, the early promise can be achieved only with substantial additional research in which these models are applied to diet and physical activity in regard to obesity.
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