Co-development of an acceptance and commitment therapy-based intervention to increase intrinsic motivation of adolescents to change weight: The AIM2Change study
Jennifer S. Cox, Aidan J. Searle, Idoia Iturbe, Gail A. Thornton, Ingram Wright, Claire Semple, Ken Clare, Julian P. Hamilton-Shield, Elanor C. Hinton

TL;DR
This study co-developed an online therapy-based program to help adolescents manage weight by boosting intrinsic motivation.
Contribution
The novel contribution is a co-developed, ACT-based intervention tailored for adolescents with weight complications.
Findings
The co-development process led to practical changes like focusing on eating behavior and body image early on.
Feedback from participants highlighted the intervention's theoretical understanding and real-world benefits.
AIM2Change addresses an unmet need in childhood weight management services.
Abstract
Childhood obesity levels continue to rise, with significant impact on individuals and the NHS. The ‘Complications of Excess Weight’ (CEW) clinics provide support to young people with complications of their weight. Our objective was to co-develop, with young people, a new intervention; AIM2Change, to enable young people to develop their intrinsic motivation to manage weight, using Acceptance and Commitment Therapy (ACT), with a person-centred approach. Young people from the Care of Childhood Obesity (CoCO) clinic in Bristol, UK, were recruited to co-develop this intervention. The study was registered on ISRCTN (ISRCTN16607863). The seven-session, ACT-based intervention was delivered one-to-one, securely online. Qualitative interviews were conducted after each intervention session was delivered. Qualitative data were coded and reviewed regularly to make iterative changes to individual…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMindfulness and Compassion Interventions · Eating Disorders and Behaviors · Behavioral Health and Interventions
