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Behavioral Interventions, mHealth Self-Monitoring Tools Cut Obesity

mHealth self-monitoring tools lead to greater reduction in obesity than traditional paper-based behavioral interventions in 21 out of 34 comparisons.

Behavioral Interventions, mHealth Self-Monitoring Tools Cut Obesity

Source: Thinkstock

By Hannah Nelson

- Behavioral interventions using mHealth self-monitoring tools lead to significant weight loss among overweight or obese patients, according to a research review published online in The Obesity Society's flagship journal, Obesity.

Researchers reviewed randomized controlled studies among overweight or obese adults, ultimately concluding that digital self-monitoring lead to weight loss in 74 percent of interventions across three major behaviors tracked (diet, physical activity, and body weight).

"Digital health tools have flourished in the past decade," said Michele L. Patel, PhD, corresponding author of the study and post-doctoral research fellow at the Stanford Prevention Research Center in the Stanford University School of Medicine. "What this paper sought out to explore was whether tracking via these digital tools is effective at producing greater weight loss."

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