Evaluating and Understanding Weight Management Experiences Among Adolescent Girls During and After Residential Treatment for Obesity
Morgan E. Braxton, Subin Jang, Ashley M. Ruiz, Jim Hershey, Justin R. Ryder, Aaron S. Kelly, Gabriel Q. Shaibi

TL;DR
A long-term residential treatment program helped adolescent girls with obesity significantly reduce their BMI and shift their health goals toward overall wellness.
Contribution
This study provides a mixed-methods evaluation of a residential obesity treatment program for adolescent girls, highlighting its impact on BMI and health perceptions.
Findings
Girls in the program reduced their mean BMI by 16.1 kg/m² over 57 weeks.
The program shifted participants' health goals from weight loss to overall health improvement.
Social support was identified as a key factor in maintaining weight loss over time.
Abstract
Residential programs have been utilized for the treatment of adolescents with severe obesity, yet few have been evaluated. The objectives were to (1) evaluate the effect of a long‐term residential treatment program focused on treating adolescent girls with obesity and (2) explore girls' perceptions of weight management during and after participating in the program. A mixed‐methods approach was used to examine changes in weight outcomes over time among adolescent girls who completed the program (N = 12), and conduct qualitative interviews to explore perceptions of weight management after completion (N = 5). Girls in the program showed a reduction in mean BMI of 16.1 ± 4.2 kg/m2 (−36.3% ± 5.9%) over a mean of 57 weeks. At follow‐up, three participants regained weight while two maintained their completion weight. The program shifted girls' health goals from weight loss to improved…
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Taxonomy
TopicsObesity, Physical Activity, Diet · Eating Disorders and Behaviors · Obesity and Health Practices
