Weight regain in patients after bariatric surgery has been reported as one of the main failure factors of these surgeries, has important health consequences, such as the return of associated comorbidities, and, until that moment, needs effective treatment. Among its probable causes is the maintenance of dysfunctional eating behavior, even after the procedure. In this context, contemporary, evidence-based mindfulness training protocols focusing on health promotion and socio-emotional skills (compassionate training) have the potential to assist in self-regulation of eating behavior, reducing eating. dysfunctional and facilitating weight self-management. The aim of this study is to compare the preliminary efficacy and feasibility of the Mindfulness-Based Health Promotion (MBHP) and Attachment-Based Compassion Therapy (ABCT) programs in the eating behavior of post-weight regained bariatric patients. The study will be divided into two phases: a cross-analytical study with patients who underwent bariatric surgery between 2012 and 2016, and a controlled and randomized study only with those who obtained weight regain, with mixed data collection. Regarding the intervention study, it is expected that there will be an improvement in eating behavior; weight, weight regain reversal, self-image classification; in the quality of life; and in the levels of mindfulness, self-pity and anxiety of these patients. This study hopes to gather preliminary evidence on the effectiveness of mindfulness and compassion training for the adjuvant treatment of weight regain in post-bariatric patients.
Age range
18 Years – 60 Years
Sex
ALL
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Mean Change from Baseline in food behavior scores
Timeframe: T0 (baseline), T1(end of treatment at 8 weeks) and T2 (six months after the end of treatment)