Kg-Free: an Acceptance, Mindfulness and Compassionate-based Intervention for Women Struggling With Their Weight
NCT ID: NCT02850796
Last Updated: 2016-08-01
Study Results
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Basic Information
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COMPLETED
NA
73 participants
INTERVENTIONAL
2014-06-30
2016-06-30
Brief Summary
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Detailed Description
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The Kg-FREE intervention encloses 10 weekly group sessions (2, 5 hours/ each), highly experiential followed by two 2 booster fortnightly sessions. The intervention is divided into several modules, that are applied in a structured way: a) psycho education related to eating and physical exercise healthy habits; b) how our brain works and how does this relate to our eating and weight; c) Life values identifications to enhance intrinsic motivation; d) cognitive fusion and experiential avoidance as maladaptive strategies that underlie the psychological suffering, the negative affect (e.g. shame) and self-criticism; e) mindfulness exercises as a more adaptive strategy for emotional regulation; f) development of self-compassion as an antidote for shame and self-criticism, activating the soothing system and deactivating the threat system.
Kg-Free sessions were carried out by a clinical psychologist with previous training in contextual-behavioral therapies and one clinical psychology master student. The intervention protocol was built upon pre-existent ACT and mindfulness-based protocols for people with eating and weight issues (e.g., Forman et al., 2013; Kristeller \& Wolever, 2011; Lillis et al., 2009; Tapper et al., 2009). Additionally, and because it has been recognized the importance of integrating compassion in behavioural interventions (e.g., Luoma \& Platt, 2015), specially to deal with shame and self-criticism (Gilbert, 2010) a compassion component was added. This component aimed at training participants to develop a more accepting and kind relationship with themselves, particularly when things go wrong or when facing errors or failures.
All session followed the same basic structure, starting with 30 minutes of shared experience, followed by a five-minute mindfulness practice. Then the session content was delivered, followed by an eating mindfulness practice to train the ability to pay attention to food and eating physical sensations. Finally, the session content was briefly revised and practices for the week were established (e.g., mindfulness or compassion exercises). A participants' manual was provided, which included the targeted constructs, examples and exercise sheets. Audio files were given to the participants to ensure the practice of mindfulness and compassion exercises between sessions. Moreover, a Portuguese therapist manual was also assembled and is available upon request.
Previously to data collection, ethical approval was obtained from Clinical Trials Unit from Coimbra's University Hospital. Participants were adult women, aged between 18 and 55 years old, with overweight or obesity (BMI ≥ 25) without binge-eating, enrolled in nutritional treatment for weight loss in primary care units and Hospitals from Coimbra's district, Portugal. Participants were recruited directly at the medical care units in the day of their appointment. Participants were informed about the voluntary and confidential nature of the data. Also, a brief overview of the treatment program was presented and participants were required to sign the informed consent. In order to assure confidentiality a numerical unique code was assigned to each participant.
After eligibility assessment, participants that meet inclusion criteria were randomly assigned into one of the two study conditions - experimental group that will receive the Kg-Free intervention and a control group that will maintain Treatment as usual (which consisted in dietary and physical activity support), using a using a computer-based random allocation. The study followed the principle of treatment received.
The study comprised four different assessment moments (M0, M1, M2 e M3), namely before intervention (M0), at the end of the intervention (M1) and two follow-up moments at three (M2) and six months (M3) after the intervention. In all assessments data regarding participants' biochemical (lipid profile) and body mass parameters, eating behaviours, health, stigma and quality of life as well as psychological processes was collected. Regarding biochemical data, the blood samples were collected and analysed by the clinical analysis laboratory from the Pharmacy department. Confidentiality was assured hence only the research code for each participant was provided to the laboratory. All participants were weighted with their street clothes (without shoes) using the same Body Composition Analyzer (Tanita TBF-300) accurate to 0.1kg. Waist circumference was measured using a tape measure at the umbilicus. The remaining data collection was carried out by clinical psychologists from the research team (blinded to participant's treatment condition).
Statistical analysis All data analyses were performed using Statistical Package for the Social Sciences (SPSS, V.20) and alpha level was set at .05. Independent sample t tests were used in order to compare intervention and control groups at baseline. Power analysis for ANCOVA was calculated at priori. Using a significance level of p\<.05 and a power of 80%, a sample size of 31 per group (N = 62) was needed to detect a standardized effect size of f = 0.40.
To test between-group differences at post-treatment ANCOVA with baseline as covariate and condition as a fixed factor were performed. Paired samples t-tests were performed to explore within-group differences from pre to post test, for each group separately. All effect sizes were calculated using Cohen's d.
In a second study, Repeated Measures ANOVA was performed to test differences between pre-treatment, post- treatment and 3month follow-up assessments for all participant's that completed Kg-Free intervention (N = 53). Whenever sphericity assumption was violated, the Greenhouse-Geisser correction was used to produce a valid F-ratio. Post-Hoc analyses using Bonferroni adjustment for multiple comparisons was used to explore pairwise differences (pre-to-post treatment; pre-to-3 months and post-to-3 months). Effect sizes were calculated using partial eta square (ƞ2). Finally, to explore the psychological processes that underlie the changes in health and weight and eating-related outcomes after the Kg-Free intervention MEMORE macro (Mediation and Moderation analysis for Repeated measures designs) was used. MEMORE allows for the estimation of total, direct, and indirect effects of independent variable (X) on dependent variable (Y) through one or more mediators (M) simultaneously two-occasion within-subjects design.
Conditions
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Study Design
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RANDOMIZED
PARALLEL
SUPPORTIVE_CARE
SINGLE
Study Groups
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Kg-Free
Kg-free is a manualized acceptance, mindfulness \& compassionate-based group intervention for women struggling with their weight. It comprises 10 weekly group sessions plus 2 booster fortnightly sessions (31/2months) 2h30 hours each, run in small groups (ranging from 10 to 12 participants).
Kg-Free
Cognitive-behavioral intervention based on promoting acceptance, mindfulness and self-compassion abilities
Treatment as Usual
Standard nutritional treatment that involves dietary and physical activity support provided by the medical units Standard
Treatment as Usual (TAU)
nutritional treatment for weight loss in primary care units and Hospitals from Coimbra's district that includes dietary and physical activity support
Treatment as Usual
Standard nutritional treatment that involves dietary and physical activity support provided by the medical units Standard
Interventions
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Kg-Free
Cognitive-behavioral intervention based on promoting acceptance, mindfulness and self-compassion abilities
Treatment as Usual
Standard nutritional treatment that involves dietary and physical activity support provided by the medical units Standard
Eligibility Criteria
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Inclusion Criteria
* Enrolled in nutritional treatment for weight loss in primary care units and Hospitals from Coimbra
Exclusion Criteria
* Severe psychiatric problems (severe depressive episode, substance abuse, Bipolar disorder and Borderline Personality Disorder) assessed through Structured Clinical Interview for DSM Disorders (SCDI-I and SCID-II);
* medical conditions that affect weight;
* medication that can cause significant weight or appetite changes.
18 Years
55 Years
FEMALE
No
Sponsors
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University of Coimbra
OTHER
Responsible Party
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Lara Palmeira
Mcs
Principal Investigators
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José A. Pinto-Gouveia, PhD
Role: STUDY_CHAIR
CINEICC's Coordinator, University of Coimbra
References
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Palmeira L, Pinto-Gouveia J, Cunha M. The role of weight self-stigma on the quality of life of women with overweight and obesity: A multi-group comparison between binge eaters and non-binge eaters. Appetite. 2016 Oct 1;105:782-9. doi: 10.1016/j.appet.2016.07.015. Epub 2016 Jul 14.
Palmeira,L.,Cunha, M.,Pinto-Gouveia, J., Carvalho, S., & Lillis, J. (2016) New developments in the assessment of weight-related experiential avoidance (AAQW-Revised). Journal of Contextual Behavioral Science, in press. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jcbs.2016.06.001i
Palmeira L, Pinto-Gouveia J, Cunha M. Exploring the efficacy of an acceptance, mindfulness & compassionate-based group intervention for women struggling with their weight (Kg-Free): A randomized controlled trial. Appetite. 2017 May 1;112:107-116. doi: 10.1016/j.appet.2017.01.027. Epub 2017 Jan 21.
Other Identifiers
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SFRH/BD/84452/2012
Identifier Type: OTHER_GRANT
Identifier Source: secondary_id
CINEICC-01-LP
Identifier Type: -
Identifier Source: org_study_id
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