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An evaluation of a television-delivered behavioral weight loss program: Are the ratings acceptable?
44
Citations
21
References
1996
Year
Physical ActivityBehavioral OutcomeWeight ManagementProgram EvaluationObesityHealth CommunicationPublic HealthHealth EducationBehavioral SciencesLifestyle ModificationHealth PolicyWeight LossesHealth PromotionObesity ManagementRehabilitationBehavioral MedicineHealth BehaviorLifestyle ChangeVideotaped GroupMedicineTelevision Delivery
This experiment evaluated the efficacy of television delivery of a behavioral weight reduction program. Seventy-one overweight adults were randomly assigned to a live-contact weight loss group that was videotaped for viewing by other groups, a live-contact group that was not videotaped, a television-delivered group that observed the videotaped weight loss sessions, or a waiting-list control group. Participants in all 3 treatment groups lost significantly more weight during the 8-week treatment program than those in the waiting-list control group. There was no significant weight loss differences among the 3 treatment groups during the program. These weight changes were maintained at 3-month follow-up. At 15-month follow-up, the television-delivered group and the live-contact group maintained their weight losses, whereas the videotaped group did not. Cost-effectiveness analyses indicated that the television-delivered group received the most cost-effective treatment.
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