Effect of Minimal Individual or Group Enhancement in an eHealth Program on Mental Health, Health Behavior, and Work Ability in Employees With Obesity: Randomized Controlled Trial

Abstract BackgroundMental health problems and adverse health behaviors are enriched in individuals with obesity and need to be considered in weight loss interventions. Regarding weight loss, hybrid interventions combining digital and in-person elements have proven superior to...

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Main Authors: Siniriikka A Männistö, Joona Muotka, Laura-Unnukka Suojanen, Raimo Lappalainen, Kirsi H Pietiläinen, Riitta Korpela
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: JMIR Publications 2025-07-01
Series:JMIR Mental Health
Online Access:https://mental.jmir.org/2025/1/e66518
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author Siniriikka A Männistö
Joona Muotka
Laura-Unnukka Suojanen
Raimo Lappalainen
Kirsi H Pietiläinen
Riitta Korpela
author_facet Siniriikka A Männistö
Joona Muotka
Laura-Unnukka Suojanen
Raimo Lappalainen
Kirsi H Pietiläinen
Riitta Korpela
author_sort Siniriikka A Männistö
collection DOAJ
description Abstract BackgroundMental health problems and adverse health behaviors are enriched in individuals with obesity and need to be considered in weight loss interventions. Regarding weight loss, hybrid interventions combining digital and in-person elements have proven superior to eHealth-only interventions. However, it remains unclear whether minimal group or individual enhancement could bring additional benefits to the mental health and health behavior domains in individuals with obesity. ObjectiveThis study aimed to explore whether minimal group or individual enhancements could offer additional benefits to an eHealth intervention in relation to mental health, perceived work ability, and health behavior in a sample of occupational health patients with obesity. In addition, the study sought to examine the overall effects of the health behavior–focused intervention across these domains. MethodsThis study was a randomized controlled trial with a 12-month intervention (March 2021-2022), with selected variables followed for another 12 months without additional support. Recruited from occupational health care, 111 working-age adults with BMI 30‐40 kg/m2 ResultsWe observed inconsistent fluctuations between the treatment arms in depression and burnout scores, indicating a lack of meaningful intervention effects despite statistical significance. Therefore, none of the treatment arms showed superiority over another. Across all participants, depression showed an estimated mean decrease of 2.5 BDI-21 points, with older participants experiencing a greater reduction in depressive symptoms. Furthermore, binge eating tendency decreased by 4.9 BES points during the 12-month intervention. We also observed increases in eating competence, controlled restraint, and physical activity. However, the 24-month measurements showed an adverse effect on eating competence, especially on attitudes toward eating and food, during the follow-up period without further support. ConclusionsMinimal enhancement through either group or individual video-conference meetings did not provide additional benefits in the mental health or eating habit domains compared with the eHealth intervention alone. Nevertheless, our results indicate that eHealth interventions for weight loss have the potential to reduce depression symptoms and binge-eating tendencies, while also improving eating competence and physical activity across the study population. Continued support may be necessary to sustain positive changes.
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spelling doaj-art-d2faef4d4e064caa9c9f7a091001f8a82025-08-20T03:51:44ZengJMIR PublicationsJMIR Mental Health2368-79592025-07-0112e66518e6651810.2196/66518Effect of Minimal Individual or Group Enhancement in an eHealth Program on Mental Health, Health Behavior, and Work Ability in Employees With Obesity: Randomized Controlled TrialSiniriikka A Männistöhttp://orcid.org/0000-0001-5359-2714Joona Muotkahttp://orcid.org/0000-0002-7113-903XLaura-Unnukka Suojanenhttp://orcid.org/0000-0003-0771-8026Raimo Lappalainenhttp://orcid.org/0000-0001-6683-134XKirsi H Pietiläinenhttp://orcid.org/0000-0002-8522-1288Riitta Korpelahttp://orcid.org/0000-0003-0337-9186 Abstract BackgroundMental health problems and adverse health behaviors are enriched in individuals with obesity and need to be considered in weight loss interventions. Regarding weight loss, hybrid interventions combining digital and in-person elements have proven superior to eHealth-only interventions. However, it remains unclear whether minimal group or individual enhancement could bring additional benefits to the mental health and health behavior domains in individuals with obesity. ObjectiveThis study aimed to explore whether minimal group or individual enhancements could offer additional benefits to an eHealth intervention in relation to mental health, perceived work ability, and health behavior in a sample of occupational health patients with obesity. In addition, the study sought to examine the overall effects of the health behavior–focused intervention across these domains. MethodsThis study was a randomized controlled trial with a 12-month intervention (March 2021-2022), with selected variables followed for another 12 months without additional support. Recruited from occupational health care, 111 working-age adults with BMI 30‐40 kg/m2 ResultsWe observed inconsistent fluctuations between the treatment arms in depression and burnout scores, indicating a lack of meaningful intervention effects despite statistical significance. Therefore, none of the treatment arms showed superiority over another. Across all participants, depression showed an estimated mean decrease of 2.5 BDI-21 points, with older participants experiencing a greater reduction in depressive symptoms. Furthermore, binge eating tendency decreased by 4.9 BES points during the 12-month intervention. We also observed increases in eating competence, controlled restraint, and physical activity. However, the 24-month measurements showed an adverse effect on eating competence, especially on attitudes toward eating and food, during the follow-up period without further support. ConclusionsMinimal enhancement through either group or individual video-conference meetings did not provide additional benefits in the mental health or eating habit domains compared with the eHealth intervention alone. Nevertheless, our results indicate that eHealth interventions for weight loss have the potential to reduce depression symptoms and binge-eating tendencies, while also improving eating competence and physical activity across the study population. Continued support may be necessary to sustain positive changes.https://mental.jmir.org/2025/1/e66518
spellingShingle Siniriikka A Männistö
Joona Muotka
Laura-Unnukka Suojanen
Raimo Lappalainen
Kirsi H Pietiläinen
Riitta Korpela
Effect of Minimal Individual or Group Enhancement in an eHealth Program on Mental Health, Health Behavior, and Work Ability in Employees With Obesity: Randomized Controlled Trial
JMIR Mental Health
title Effect of Minimal Individual or Group Enhancement in an eHealth Program on Mental Health, Health Behavior, and Work Ability in Employees With Obesity: Randomized Controlled Trial
title_full Effect of Minimal Individual or Group Enhancement in an eHealth Program on Mental Health, Health Behavior, and Work Ability in Employees With Obesity: Randomized Controlled Trial
title_fullStr Effect of Minimal Individual or Group Enhancement in an eHealth Program on Mental Health, Health Behavior, and Work Ability in Employees With Obesity: Randomized Controlled Trial
title_full_unstemmed Effect of Minimal Individual or Group Enhancement in an eHealth Program on Mental Health, Health Behavior, and Work Ability in Employees With Obesity: Randomized Controlled Trial
title_short Effect of Minimal Individual or Group Enhancement in an eHealth Program on Mental Health, Health Behavior, and Work Ability in Employees With Obesity: Randomized Controlled Trial
title_sort effect of minimal individual or group enhancement in an ehealth program on mental health health behavior and work ability in employees with obesity randomized controlled trial
url https://mental.jmir.org/2025/1/e66518
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