An online behavioral counseling tool is effective at helping people lose weight, revealed a new research led by the University of Southampton.

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An online behavioral counseling tool is effective at helping people lose weight, revealed a new research led by the University of Southampton.
Professor Paul Little, Professor of Primary Care Research who developed POWeR+, said, "Many people receiving the POWeR+ intervention were able to sustain weight loss over one year but also felt more enabled in managing their weight going forward, and fewer resorted to other activities such as commercial slimming programs to lose weight."
POWeR+ is an online behavioral intervention that is supported by brief contacts from a practice nurse. It teaches participants self-regulation and cognitive behavioral techniques to provide them with long-term, sustainable ways of forming healthy eating and exercise habits.
The NIHR Health Technology Assessment (HTA)-funded study, published in The Lancet Diabetes & Endocrinology journal, involved 818 people with a BMI over 30 who took part in 24 web-based sessions over six months. They were randomly allocated to one of three groups;
1) control - an existing online intervention that encourages healthier options.
2) POWeR+ with face-to-face support from a nurse, and
3) POWeR+ with remote very brief support from a nurse (on average three email contacts and one phone contact).
All patients were asked to come for appointments for weighing at six and also 12 months to see if weight loss was maintained.
They found that while people in all groups lost weight, the two groups receiving the POWeR+ intervention lost more. The control group lost an average of three kilogram during 12 months and 21% of people were able to maintain a clinically important amount of weight loss by 12 months. The POWeR+ group with face-to-face support lost 1.5 kilograms more averaged over 12 months and 29% of people had maintained important weight loss by 12 months. The POWeR+ group with remote support lost 1.3 kilograms more averaged over 12 months with 32% able to maintain clinically important weight loss by 12 months.
Source-Newswise
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