# Non‐pharmacologicaL InterVEntions for Antipsychotic‐Induced Weight Gain (RESOLVE) in People Living With Severe Mental Illness: A Realist Synthesis

**Authors:** Maura MacPhee, Jo Howe, Hafsah Habib, Emilia Piwowarczyk, Geoff Wong, Amy Ahern, Gurkiran Birdi, Suzanne Higgs, Sheri Oduola, Alex Kenny, Annabel Walsh, Rachel Upthegrove, Katherine Allen, Max Carlish, Justine Lovell, Ian Maidment

PMC · DOI: 10.1111/obr.13962 · Obesity Reviews · 2025-07-27

## TL;DR

This study explores how non-drug approaches can help people with severe mental illness manage weight gain caused by antipsychotic medications.

## Contribution

The study provides a realist synthesis of how, why, and for whom non-pharmacological interventions work for managing antipsychotic-induced weight gain.

## Key findings

- Successful interventions are collaborative, flexible, and start early with comprehensive assessments.
- A strong therapeutic relationship and a destigmatizing approach are crucial for effective weight management.
- Stigma and dual stigma significantly impact individuals with severe mental illness and weight gain.

## Abstract

Antipsychotic medications are used to treat individuals with severe mental illness (SMI) but are associated with rapid weight gain and several physical and mental risk factors. Early, proactive weight management is necessary to preempt these risk factors. The aim of this research was to understand and explain how, why, for whom, and in what contexts non‐pharmacological interventions can help to manage antipsychotic‐induced weight gain.

A realist review was conducted to identify contextual factors and underlying mechanisms associated with effective, non‐pharmacological weight management interventions for adults > 18‐years old. Practitioners and lived experience stakeholders were integral.

Seventy‐four documents were used to construct a program theory and 12 testable context‐mechanism‐outcome configurations. People with SMI benefit from support when navigating interventions aimed at managing weight gain. From a practitioner perspective, a good therapeutic relationship is important in helping people with SMI navigate early diagnosis and treatment options and facilitate the exploriation of any pre‐existing issues. Interventions that are flexible and tailored to the needs of individuals, ideally starting early in a person's recovery journey, are likely to yield better results. Additional sources of support include family, friends, and peers with lived experience who can help individuals transition to autonomous goal‐setting. The review findings also emphasizes the significant effect of stigma/dual stigma on individuals with SMI and weight gain.

Successful interventions are collaborative, flexible, and underpinned by early and comprehensive assessment with the use of appropriate behavior change approaches. The therapeutic relationship is key, with a destigmatizing approach required. A realist evaluation with primary data is currently underway.

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** Weight Gain (MESH:D015430), SMI (MESH:D045169), Mental Illness (MESH:D001523)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Full text

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## Figures

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## References

170 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12531729/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12531729