Testing an Internet-Based Turkish Obesity Behavioral Therapy Program: A Randomized Study

Behavioral treatment is recommended as the first line intervention for the prevention of health problems pertaining to obesity. Internet-based programs are used to provide cognitive behavioral therapy for psychiatric disorders and systemic diseases to a large number of patients at low cost. The aim...

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Veröffentlicht in:Türk psikiyatri dergisi 2020, Vol.31 (1), p.41-47
Hauptverfasser: Hepdurgun, Cenan, Özalay, Özgün, Pırıldar, Şebnem, Rudarlı Nalçakan, Gülbin, Saygılı, Lütfiye Füsun, Seçkiner, Selda, Ünalır, Murat Osman, Elbi, Hayriye
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Sprache:eng ; tur
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Zusammenfassung:Behavioral treatment is recommended as the first line intervention for the prevention of health problems pertaining to obesity. Internet-based programs are used to provide cognitive behavioral therapy for psychiatric disorders and systemic diseases to a large number of patients at low cost. The aim of this study is to develop the first internet based Turkish obesity behavioral therapy program and test its short-term effectiveness. A Turkish web-based behavioral therapy program based on the behavioral strategies employed in the Diabetes Prevention Program was generated. In order to test the effectiveness of this internet-based program an eight week randomized study was conducted. A total of 101 overweight participants with body mass index in the 25-40 range were randomly assigned to an eight-week weight loss program using either the Internet Behavior Therapy (IBT, n=51) or e-mail education (EE, n=50). The participants in the IBT group were provided access to an Internet program that provided videos teaching behavioral weight-loss skills as well as a self-monitoring platform to calculate the daily calorie balance. The participants in the EE group received weekly e-mails with information on healthy eating, physical exercises and weight loss for eight weeks. The primary outcome measure was the observed weight change at the end of the 8 weeks. In the analyses wherein baseline weight was carried forward for missing data, the IBT produced significantly larger mean weight loss in comparison to the EE at the end of the 8 weeks [2.28 kg (2.11) vs. 0.74 kg (1.57), p=0.001]. The participants in the IBT group, when compared to the EE group, were also more likely to achieve a clinically significant weight loss of 5% of their initial body weight at the end of the 8-week study period (17.6% vs. 2%, p=0.016). The participants who received a structured IBT intervention lost significantly more weight after two months, compared to those who received weekly informational emails regarding weight loss. Internet-based behavioral therapy programs may have the potential to serve as a low-cost alternative for obese patients.
ISSN:1300-2163
2651-3463