A randomized trial examining the effect of yoga on dietary lapses and lapse triggers following behavioral weight loss treatment

Dietary lapses can hinder weight loss and yoga can improve self-regulation, which may protect against lapses. This study examined the effect of yoga on dietary lapses, potential lapse triggers (e.g., affective states, cravings, dietary temptations), and reasons for initiating eating following weight...

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Veröffentlicht in:Obesity science & practice 2023-10, Vol.9 (5), p.484-492
Hauptverfasser: Unick, Jessica L, Dunsiger, Shira I, Bock, Beth C, Sherman, Sally A, Braun, Tosca D, Hayes, Jacqueline F, Goldstein, Stephanie P, Wing, Rena R
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Dietary lapses can hinder weight loss and yoga can improve self-regulation, which may protect against lapses. This study examined the effect of yoga on dietary lapses, potential lapse triggers (e.g., affective states, cravings, dietary temptations), and reasons for initiating eating following weight loss treatment. Sixty women with overweight/obesity (34.3 ± 3.9 kg/m ) were randomized to a 12 week yoga intervention (2x/week; YOGA) or contact-matched control (cooking/nutrition classes; CON) following a 12-week behavioral weight loss program. Participants responded to smartphone surveys (5x/day) over a 10-day period at baseline, 12, and 24 weeks to assess lapses and triggers. At 24 weeks, YOGA and CON differed on several types of lapses (i.e., less eating past full, eating more than usual, loss of control when eating, self-identified overeating, difficulty stopping eating in YOGA), and YOGA was less likely to eat to feel better or in response to stress (ps 
ISSN:2055-2238
2055-2238
DOI:10.1002/osp4.678