(Press-News.org) About The Study: Among men with obesity, an intervention with text messaging with financial incentive significantly improved weight loss compared with a control group, whereas text messaging alone was not significantly better than the control condition. These findings support text messaging combined with financial incentives to attain weight loss in men with obesity.
Quote from corresponding author Prof. Pat Hoddinott, M.B., B.S., Ph.D.:
“Losing weight can make people feel better, reduce their risk of many health problems such as diabetes, and helps the health service with their aim to keep men well. However, we know men often don’t like to go to traditional weight loss groups.
“This was a very carefully planned study, created for men by men. We worked closely with various men’s health groups and charities, including Men’s Health Forum in the UK and Ireland, with more than 1000 men living with obesity informing the design of the incentive structure.
“The research showed that offering cash incentives was a popular and effective way of helping men to lose weight. This initiative would be a low-cost solution for the health service to offer to men, requiring only four short weight appointments, and with money paid out only at the end to those who lose over 5% of their starting weight.”
Media advisory: The study is being presented at the European Congress on Obesity.
Contact information for Prof. Hoddinott:
Press officer: Sarah Manning, sarah.manning@stir.ac.uk; 01786 466436 / 07341 052 750.
(doi:10.1001/jama.2024.7064)
To access the embargoed study: Visit our For The Media website at this link https://media.jamanetwork.com/
Editor’s Note: Please see the article for additional information, including other authors, author contributions and affiliations, conflict of interest and financial disclosures, and funding and support.
# # #
Embed this link to provide your readers free access to the full-text article This link will be live at the embargo time https://jamanetwork.com/journals/jama/fullarticle/10.1001/jama.2024.7064?guestAccessKey=e5e4f13d-f93c-4d64-b9fb-c579e4b06a33&utm_source=For_The_Media&utm_medium=referral&utm_campaign=ftm_links&utm_content=tfl&utm_term=051424
END
Text messages with financial incentives for men with obesity
JAMA
2024-05-15
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
An adaptive behavioral intervention for weight loss management
2024-05-15
About The Study: A wireless feedback system (Wi-Fi activity tracker and scale with smartphone app to provide daily feedback) was not noninferior to the same system with added coaching. Continued efforts are needed to identify strategies for weight loss management and to accurately select interventions for different individuals to achieve weight loss goals.
Quote from corresponding author Bonnie Spring, Ph.D.:
“With U.S. obesity prevalence projected to reach 49% by 2030, limited obesity treatment resources need to be spread across more of the ...
Tech can’t replace human coaches in obesity treatment
2024-05-15
· The need for low cost but effective obesity treatments has become urgent
· ‘At this stage, treatment still needs a human because the tech alone doesn’t produce clinically acceptable weight loss for most people’
· Not previously known whether tech alone could produce clinically acceptable weight loss
CHICAGO --- A new Northwestern Medicine study shows that technology alone can’t replace the human touch to produce meaningful weight loss in obesity treatment.
“Giving people technology alone ...
Severe obesity in childhood can halve life expectancy, global modelling study finds
2024-05-15
Impact of age of onset, severity and duration of childhood obesity quantified for the first time
Early onset obesity model finds that a child who is living with severe obesity at age 4 and doesn’t lose weight has a life expectancy of just 39. But weight loss can give back decades of life
Childhood obesity is a life-threatening disease, say researchers
New research being presented at the European Congress on Obesity (ECO) in Venice, Italy (12-15 May) has, for the first time, quantified the impact of different aspects of childhood obesity on long-term health and life expectancy.
The modelling by stradoo GmbH, a life sciences consultancy ...
Study supports lower BMI threshold for obesity in the over 40s
2024-05-15
Changes in body composition with ageing—increases in body fat and declines in muscle—mean that BMI is not accurate in predicting obesity in middle-aged and older adults.
BMI identified half as many over 40s with obesity as predicted by body fat percentage.
A new lower BMI cut-off for obesity based on body fat percentage (27kg/m²) in the over 40s may be more appropriate than the existing WHO BMI threshold (30 kg/m²).
The authors say establishing this new lower BMI cut-off point for the over 40s in clinical settings and obesity guidelines potentially ...
Text messages with financial incentives can help men who are living with obesity lose weight, UK study finds (JAMA)
2024-05-15
Men in England, Scotland and Northern Ireland offered up to £400 for hitting weight loss targets lost more weight than those not given cash incentive
Win-win strategy could pay for itself, say researchers
*Note: this paper is being presented at the European Congress on Obesity (ECO) and is being published in JAMA. Please credit both the congress and the journal in your stories.*
A new study presented at the European Congress on Obesity (ECO) in Venice, Italy (12-15 May), and published simultaneously in JAMA, has concluded that text messages with financial incentives can help men who are living with obesity lose weight and could be a valuable alternative ...
Scientists develop an affordable sensor for lead contamination
2024-05-14
Engineers at MIT, Nanytang Technological University, and several companies have developed a compact and inexpensive technology for detecting and measuring lead concentrations in water, potentially enabling a significant advance in tackling this persistent global health issue.
The World Health Organization estimates that 240 million people worldwide are exposed to drinking water that contains unsafe amounts of toxic lead, which can affect brain development in children, cause birth defects, and produce a variety of neurological, cardiac, ...
UC Irvine-led study links sleep apnea severity during REM stage to verbal memory decline
2024-05-14
Irvine, Calif., May 14, 2024 — A research team led by the University of California, Irvine has revealed the link between the frequency of sleep apnea events during the rapid-eye-movement stage and the severity of verbal memory impairment in older adults at risk for Alzheimer’s disease. Verbal memory refers to the cognitive ability to retain and recall information presented through spoken words or written text and is particularly vulnerable to Alzheimer’s.
The study, recently published online in the journal Alzheimer’s Research & Therapy, discovered a specific correlation between the severity of sleep apnea – when breathing pauses while ...
What’s actually in your supplements? Chapman University researchers detect hidden ingredients and questionable claims in supplements
2024-05-14
A recent study published in Analytical Science Journal conducted by Schmid College of Science and Technology Professor Rosalee Hellberg and students Calin Harris, Diane Kim, Miranda Miranda and Chevon Jordan, reveal that some supplement companies may mislead customers with unproven health claims and undeclared ingredients.
The researchers focused on supplements that have been associated with the purported treatment or prevention of COVID-19 and other respiratory illnesses. During the pandemic, the use of dietary supplements skyrocketed throughout the world. “There was a big spike in purchase and use of these types ...
STRIVE project to study ozone, atmospheric layers among finalists for next-generation NASA satellite
2024-05-14
A project led by the University of Washington to better understand our atmosphere’s complexity is a finalist for NASA’s next generation of Earth-observing satellites. The space agency this week announced the projects that will each receive $5 million to advance to the next stage and conduct a one-year concept study.
STRIVE seeks to better understand the troposphere that we inhabit and the stratosphere above it, where the ozone layer is, as well as the interface where these two layers meet. That interface, about 6 miles (10 kilometers) above the surface, is where important ...
Simulating diffusion using 'kinosons' and machine learning
2024-05-14
Researchers from the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign have recast diffusion in multicomponent alloys as a sum of individual contributions, called “kinosons.” Using machine learning to compute the statistical distribution of the individual contributions, they were able to model the alloy and calculate its diffusivity orders of magnitude more efficiently than computing whole trajectories. This work was recently published in the journal Physical Review Letters.
“We found a much more efficient way to calculate diffusion in solids, and at the same time, we learned more ...
LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:
How talking slows eye movements behind the wheel
The Ceramic Society of Japan’s Oxoate Ceramics Research Association launches new international book project
Heart-brain connection: international study reveals the role of the vagus nerve in keeping the heart young
Researchers identify Rb1 as a predictive biomarker for a new therapeutic strategy in some breast cancers
Survey reveals ethical gaps slowing AI adoption in pediatric surgery
Stimulant ADHD medications work differently than thought
AI overestimates how smart people are, according to HSE economists
HSE researchers create genome-wide map of quadruplexes
Scientists boost cell "powerhouses" to burn more calories
Automatic label checking: The missing step in making reliable medical AI
Low daily alcohol intake linked to 50% heightened mouth cancer risk in India
American Meteorological Society announces Rick Spinrad as 2026 President-Elect
Biomass-based carbon capture spotlighted in newly released global climate webinar recording
Illuminating invisible nano pollutants: advanced bioimaging tracks the full journey of emerging nanoscale contaminants in living systems
How does age affect recovery from spinal cord injury?
Novel AI tool offers prognosis for patients with head and neck cancer
Fathers’ microplastic exposure tied to their children’s metabolic problems
Research validates laboratory model for studying high-grade serous ovarian cancer
SIR 2026 delivers transformative breakthroughs in minimally invasive medicine to improve patient care
Stem Cell Reports most downloaded papers of 2025 highlight the breadth and impact of stem cell research
Oxford-led study estimates NHS spends around 3% of its primary and secondary care budget on the health impacts of heat and cold in England
A researcher’s long quest leads to a smart composite breakthrough
Urban wild bees act as “microbial sensors” of city health.
New study finds where you live affects recovery after a hip fracture
Forecasting the impact of fully automated vehicle adoption on US road traffic injuries
Alcohol-related hospitalizations from 2016 to 2022
Semaglutide and hospitalizations in patients with obesity and established cardiovascular disease
Researchers ‘listen in’ to embryo-mother interactions during implantation using a culture system replicating the womb lining
How changing your diet could help save the world
How to make AI truly scalable and reliable for real-time traffic assignment?
[Press-News.org] Text messages with financial incentives for men with obesityJAMA


