首页> 外文期刊>BMC Public Health >Breaking bad habits by improving executive function in individuals with obesity
【24h】

Breaking bad habits by improving executive function in individuals with obesity

机译:通过改善肥胖个体的执行功能来打破不良习惯

获取原文
           

摘要

Two primary factors that contribute to obesity are unhealthy eating and sedentary behavior. These behaviors are particularly difficult to change in the long-term because they are often enacted habitually. Cognitive Remediation Therapy has been modified and applied to the treatment of obesity (CRT-O) with preliminary results of a randomized controlled trial demonstrating significant weight loss and improvements in executive function. The objective of this study was to conduct a secondary data analysis of the CRT-O trial to evaluate whether CRT-O reduces unhealthy habits that contribute to obesity via improvements in executive function. Eighty participants with obesity were randomized to CRT-O or control. Measures of executive function (Wisconsin Card Sort Task and Trail Making Task) and unhealthy eating and sedentary behavior habits were administered at baseline, post-intervention and at 3?month follow-up. Participants receiving CRT-O demonstrated improvements in both measures of executive function and reductions in both unhealthy habit outcomes compared to control. Mediation analyses revealed that change in one element of executive function performance (Wisconsin Card Sort Task perseverance errors) mediated the effect of CRT-O on changes in both habit outcomes. These results suggest that the effectiveness of CRT-O may result from the disruption of unhealthy habits made possible by improvements in executive function. In particular, it appears that cognitive flexibility, as measured by the Wisconsin Card Sort task, is a key mechanism in this process. Improving cognitive flexibility may enable individuals to capitalise on interruptions in unhealthy habits by adjusting their behavior in line with their weight loss goals rather than persisting with an unhealthy choice. The RCT was registered with the Australian New Zealand Registry of Clinical Trials (trial id: ACTRN12613000537752 ).
机译:导致肥胖的两个主要因素是不健康的饮食和久坐的行为。从长远来看,这些行为很难改变,因为它们通常是习惯性地制定的。认知矫正疗法已被修改并应用于肥胖症(CRT-O)的治疗,其随机对照试验的初步结果表明减肥效果显着,执行功能得到改善。这项研究的目的是对CRT-O试验进行二次数据分析,以评估CRT-O是否通过改善执行功能来减少导致肥胖的不良健康习惯。将80名肥胖参与者随机分为CRT-O或对照组。在基线,干预后和随访3个月时,测量执行功能(威斯康星卡片分类任务和追踪任务)以及不健康饮食和久坐行为习惯的措施。与对照相比,接受CRT-O的参与者表现出执行功能指标的改善和不良习惯结果的减少。中介分析显示,执行功能绩效的一个要素发生变化(威斯康星卡片分类任务的毅力错误)介导了CRT-O对两种习惯结局变化的影响。这些结果表明,CRT-O的有效性可能是由于执行功能的改善而导致的不健康习惯的破坏所致。特别是,通过威斯康星卡片分类任务衡量的认知灵活性似乎是此过程中的关键机制。提高认知灵活性可以使个人通过根据自己的减肥目标调整其行为,而不是坚持不健康的选择来利用不健康习惯的干扰。该RCT已在澳大利亚新西兰临床试验注册中心注册(试验编号:ACTRN12613000537752)。

著录项

相似文献

  • 外文文献
  • 中文文献
  • 专利
获取原文

客服邮箱:kefu@zhangqiaokeyan.com

京公网安备:11010802029741号 ICP备案号:京ICP备15016152号-6 六维联合信息科技 (北京) 有限公司©版权所有
  • 客服微信

  • 服务号