Daily self-weighing compared with an active control causes greater negative affective lability in emerging adult women: A randomized trial.
Carly R PacanowskiG DominickR D CrosbyS G EngelL CaoJ A LindePublished in: Applied psychology. Health and well-being (2023)
Age-related weight gain prevention may reduce population overweight/obesity. Emerging adulthood is a crucial time to act, as rate of gain accelerates and health habits develop. Evidence supports self-weighing (SW) for preventing weight gain; however, how SW impacts psychological states and behaviors in vulnerable groups is unclear. This study assessed daily SW effects on affective lability, stress, weight-related stress, body satisfaction, and weight-control behaviors. Sixty-nine university females (aged 18-22) were randomized to daily SW or temperature-taking (TT) control. Over 2 weeks, participants completed five daily ecological momentary assessments with their intervention behavior. A graph of their data with a trendline was emailed daily, with no other intervention components. Multilevel mixed models with random effect for day assessed variability in positive/negative affect. Generalized linear mixed models assessed outcomes pre- and post-SW or TT and generalized estimating equations assessed weight-control behaviors. Negative affective lability was significantly greater for SW versus TT. While general stress did not differ between groups, weight-related stress was significantly higher and body satisfaction was significantly lower post-behavior for SW but not TT. Groups did not significantly differ in the number or probability of weight-control behaviors. Caution is advised when recommending self-weighing to prevent weight gain for emerging adults.
Keyphrases
- weight gain
- body mass index
- birth weight
- physical activity
- weight loss
- randomized controlled trial
- bipolar disorder
- stress induced
- mental health
- metabolic syndrome
- healthcare
- electronic health record
- pregnant women
- clinical trial
- young adults
- machine learning
- skeletal muscle
- adipose tissue
- neural network
- health information
- study protocol
- early life