Article
Details
Citation
Torrens C, Campbell P, Findlay S, Cowie J, O'Carroll R, Hoddinott P, Ozakinci G & Farquharson B (2026) The influence of relationships within behavioural weight management interventions: an overview. Obesity Reviews. https://doi.org/10.1111/obr.70176
Abstract
Behavioural weight management interventions have been shown to be effective for weight loss. However, a common challenge is difficulty in engaging with the public, participants or service-users across the research continuum. User-provider relationships are key in weight management and may be integral to continuing engagement. This overview aimed to understand the nature of relationships within behavioural weight management interventions delivered in research studies and healthcare settings, how these may influence retention as well as potential relationship barriers and facilitators. Six databases were searched, 20 reviews (27 reports) were included. Most reviews investigated weight management delivered face-to-face by healthcare professionals across different settings. The Theoretical Domains Framework guided the synthesis of qualitative and quantitative data regarding user-provider relationships. GRADE CER-Qual was used to assess the confidence of findings. Thirty-eight findings were categorised to domains in the framework in addition to two cross-cutting themes. High confidence evidence demonstrated that the domains of knowledge, skills, social/ professional role or identity, environmental context and resources and behavioural regulation provided challenges as well as enabling relationships in weight management. The central domain underpinning the influence of relationships on retention was social influences with weight stigma a pervasive theme recurring across domains. Application of a theoretical lens to consider cognitive, affective, social and environmental influences helped better understand user-provider relationships as a potential mechanism through which retention-related behaviours in weight management can be driven or deterred. This overview suggests that improving user-provider relationships should be considered a useful retention strategy in weight management programmes.
Keywords
obesity; relationships; retention; weight loss
| Status | Early Online |
|---|---|
| Funders | University of Stirling |
| Publication date online | 30/06/2026 |
| Date accepted by journal | 01/05/2026 |
| ISSN | 1467-7881 |
| eISSN | 1467-789X |
People (3)
Associate Professor in Adult Nursing, CHeCR
Emeritus Professor, Psychology
Professor and Deputy Dean of Faculty, Psychology