Goal achievement and adaptive goal adjustment in a behavioral intervention for participants with prediabetes.
Maija Huttunen-LenzSylvia HansenPia Siig VestentoftThomas Meinert LarsenMargriet Westerterp-PlantengaMathijs DrummenTanja AdamIan MacdonaldMoira TaylorElizabeth SimpsonJ Alfredo MartinezSantiago Navas-CarreteroTeodora Handjieva-DarlenskaSally D PoppittMartha P SilvestreMikael FogelholmElli JaloRoslyn MuirheadShannon BrodieJennie Brand-MillerAnne RabenWolfgang SchlichtPublished in: Journal of health psychology (2020)
Participants with prediabetes were supported to achieve and maintain weight loss with a stage-based behavior change group program named PREview behavior Modification Intervention Toolbox (PREMIT). The tendency to engage in a process of goal adjustment was examined in relation to PREMIT attendance. Analyses were based on 1857 participants who had achieved ⩾8percent weight loss. Tendency to engage in a process of goal adjustment appeared not to be influenced by PREMIT attendance. Instead, results suggested that when unsure about reaching an intervention goal, participants were more likely to engage in a process of goal adjustment, possibly lessening distress due to potentially unachievable goals, either weight loss or maintenance.