Use of behavioural change taxonomies in systematic reviews and meta-analyses regarding obesity management

Research output: Contribution to conferencePosterpeer-review

Abstract

Aims: We investigated the prevalence of behavioral change taxonomies in systematic reviews and meta-analyses related to obesity management. In addition, we analyzed the funding sources, author conflicts of interest statements, risk of bias, and favorability of the results in such studies to determine if there was a relationship between methodological quality and taxonomy use.

Methods: We searched several databases including MEDLINE, Epistemonikos, Cochrane EDSR, Pubmed, and Embase for systematic reviews and meta-analyses regarding the behavioral treatment of obesity. Screening and data extraction was performed in a masked, duplicate fashion. We performed statistical analyses to determine any significant association between use of taxonomy and study characteristics.

Results: Fifteen (of 186; 8.06%) systematic reviews used a taxonomy—9 used the BCTTv1, 3 used OXFAB, 2 used the CALO-RE, and 1 used “Taxonomy of choice architecture techniques.” Most interventions that referenced a taxonomy were self-mediated (6/60, 10%). Behavioral change taxonomies were mentioned in 10 (of 87, 11.49%) studies with a public funding source. Of the studies with favorable results, 14 studies (of 181, 7.73%) referred to a taxonomy. We found no statistically significant relationships between use of taxonomy and study characteristics.

Conclusions: We found that systematic reviews regarding the management of obesity rarely mention a behavioral change taxonomy. Given the global burden of obesity, it is crucial that behavioral change techniques are reproducible and translatable. We recommend that researchers look further into how taxonomies affect the quality and reproducibility of behavioral interventions in an effort to improve patient outcomes.
Original languageAmerican English
Pages83
StatePublished - 14 Feb 2023
EventOklahoma State University Center for Health Sciences Research Week 2023 - Oklahoma State University Center for Health Sciences, 1111 W. 17th street, Tulsa, United States
Duration: 13 Feb 202317 Feb 2023
https://medicine.okstate.edu/events/index.html?trumbaEmbed=view%3Devent%26eventid%3D160681489

Conference

ConferenceOklahoma State University Center for Health Sciences Research Week 2023
Country/TerritoryUnited States
CityTulsa
Period13/02/2317/02/23
Internet address

Keywords

  • obesity
  • behavioral change
  • taxonomy
  • systematic review
  • weight loss

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