TY - JOUR
T1 - Understanding the Components of Eating Behaviour-Focused Weight Management Interventions Adjunct to Metabolic Bariatric Surgery
T2 - Systematic Review of Published Literature
AU - Yousefi, Reyhaneh
AU - Ben-Porat, Tair
AU - O’Neill, John
AU - Boucher, Vincent Gosselin
AU - Stojanovic, Jovana
AU - Fortin, Annabelle
AU - Lavoie, Kim L.
AU - Bacon, Simon L.
N1 - Publisher Copyright: © The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer Science+Business Media, LLC, part of Springer Nature 2024.
PY - 2025/1/3
Y1 - 2025/1/3
N2 - Purpose of Review: Eating behaviour-focused interventions are essential for improving health and weight-related outcomes in patients undergoing metabolic bariatric surgery (MBS). This work aims to examine the content of eating behaviour-focused weight management interventions adjunct to MBS in terms of the type and quantity of behaviour change techniques (BCTs). A literature search retrieved randomised controlled and parallel group trials up to March 2024. Recent Findings: A total of 25 trials were included in the final analysis. Trained coders used Michie’s BCT taxonomy v1.0 to code intervention components from each trial and applied descriptive methods to report the types and frequency of BCTs. Calculated effect sizes were used to compare the impact of the experimental and comparator arms. Common BCTs applied in eating behaviour-focused interventions were ‘4.1 Instruction on how to perform a behaviour’ (68%), ‘2.3 Self-monitoring of behaviour’ (56%), ‘1.1 Goal setting (behaviour)’ (52%), ‘1.2 Problem solving’ (44%), ‘3.1 Social support (unspecified)’ (40%), and ‘1.4 Action planning’ (40%). However, the BCTs associated with the largest intervention effect sizes (2.1. Monitoring of behaviour by others without feedback and 4.2. Information about antecedents) were not among the most frequently employed techniques. Only one study described the intervention explicitly using BCT taxonomy groupings. In more than half of the studies (52%), authors did not use BCTs to describe interventions. Summary: This work highlights the importance of using standard frameworks for reporting the components of behavioural interventions to enhance scientific replication, evidence synthesis, and the ability to test interventions’ effectiveness in the future.
AB - Purpose of Review: Eating behaviour-focused interventions are essential for improving health and weight-related outcomes in patients undergoing metabolic bariatric surgery (MBS). This work aims to examine the content of eating behaviour-focused weight management interventions adjunct to MBS in terms of the type and quantity of behaviour change techniques (BCTs). A literature search retrieved randomised controlled and parallel group trials up to March 2024. Recent Findings: A total of 25 trials were included in the final analysis. Trained coders used Michie’s BCT taxonomy v1.0 to code intervention components from each trial and applied descriptive methods to report the types and frequency of BCTs. Calculated effect sizes were used to compare the impact of the experimental and comparator arms. Common BCTs applied in eating behaviour-focused interventions were ‘4.1 Instruction on how to perform a behaviour’ (68%), ‘2.3 Self-monitoring of behaviour’ (56%), ‘1.1 Goal setting (behaviour)’ (52%), ‘1.2 Problem solving’ (44%), ‘3.1 Social support (unspecified)’ (40%), and ‘1.4 Action planning’ (40%). However, the BCTs associated with the largest intervention effect sizes (2.1. Monitoring of behaviour by others without feedback and 4.2. Information about antecedents) were not among the most frequently employed techniques. Only one study described the intervention explicitly using BCT taxonomy groupings. In more than half of the studies (52%), authors did not use BCTs to describe interventions. Summary: This work highlights the importance of using standard frameworks for reporting the components of behavioural interventions to enhance scientific replication, evidence synthesis, and the ability to test interventions’ effectiveness in the future.
KW - Behaviour change techniques
KW - Eating behaviour
KW - Intervention
KW - Metabolic bariatric surgery
KW - Weight management
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85214119961&partnerID=8YFLogxK
M3 - Review article
C2 - 39753946
SN - 2162-4968
VL - 14
JO - Current obesity reports
JF - Current obesity reports
IS - 1
M1 - 3
ER -