Use of an Interactive Obesity Treatment Approach in Individuals With Severe Mental Illness: Feasibility, Acceptability, and Proposed Engagement Criteria (Preprint)

Author:

Nicol GingerORCID,Jansen MadelineORCID,Haddad RitaORCID,Ricchio AmandaORCID,Yingling MichaelORCID,Schweiger JuliaORCID,Keenoy KatieORCID,Evanoff BradleyORCID,Newcomer John WORCID

Abstract

BACKGROUND

Digital and mobile health (mHealth) interventions are increasingly being used to support healthy lifestyle change, including in certain high-risk populations such as those with severe mental illnesses (SMI). Life expectancy in this population lags 15 years behind counterparts in the general population, primarily due to obesity-related health conditions.

OBJECTIVE

We tested the feasibility and usability of a 12-week interactive obesity treatment approach (iOTA) to adults with chronic severe mental illness (SMI) (Depression, Bipolar Disorder and Schizophrenia Spectrum Disorder) receiving treatment in community settings. The iOTA incorporates short message service (SMS) text messages to supplement monthly in-person health coaching.

METHODS

Factors hypothesized to be associated with weight change were illness severity and treatment engagement. “Severe” psychiatric symptoms were defined as baseline Clinical Global Impression (CGI) Severity score of >5. Criterion engagement was defined as a text messaging response rate >80% during the first 4 weeks of treatment. Disordered eating, assessed with the Loss of Control Over Eating Scores (LOCES), was also evaluated. Participants provided qualitative data, further informing assessment of intervention feasibility, usability, and acceptability.

RESULTS

Twenty-six participants were enrolled. The mean age was 48.5 years (SD 15.67); n=10/26 (40%) were Black and n=15/26 (60%) female. Participants with lower symptom severity and adequate engagement demonstrated significantly decreased weight (F1,16=22.54, P<.001). Conversely, high symptom severity and lower text message response rates were associated with trend-level increases in weight (F1,7=4.33, P=.08). Loss of control eating was not observed to impact treatment outcome. Participants voiced preference for combination of live health coaching and text messaging, expressing desire for personalized message content.

CONCLUSIONS

These results demonstrate the feasibility of delivering an adapted iOTA to SMI patients receiving care in community settings and suggest testable criteria for defining sufficient treatment engagement and psychiatric symptom severity, two factors known to impact weight loss outcomes. These important findings suggest specific adaptations may be needed for optimal treatment outcomes in individuals with SMI.

Publisher

JMIR Publications Inc.

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