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Multiple health behaviours: overview and implications

Background More remains unknown than known about how to optimize multiple health behaviour change.

Financial Motivation Undermines Maintenance in an Intensive Diet and Activity Intervention

January 2012 Academic Editor: Geoffrey C. Williams Copyright © 2012 Arlen C. Moller et al. This is an open access article distributed under the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits

Financial Motivation Undermines Maintenance in an Intensive Diet and Activity Intervention

January 2012 Academic Editor: Geoffrey C. Williams Copyright © 2012 Arlen C. Moller et al. This is an open access article distributed under the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits

A smartphone-supported weight loss program: design of the ENGAGED randomized controlled trial

Background Obesity remains a major public health challenge, demanding cost-effective and scalable weight management programs. Delivering key treatment components via mobile technology offers a potential way to reduce expensive in-person contact, thereby lowering the cost and burden of intensive weight loss programs. The ENGAGED study is a theory-guided, randomized controlled...

A smartphone-supported weight loss program: design of the ENGAGED randomized controlled trial

Medicine, Northwestern University, 680 N. Lake Shore Drive, Suite 1400, Chicago, IL, 60611, USAChristine A Pellegrini, Jennifer M Duncan, Arlen C Moller, Joanna Buscemi, Alyson Sularz, Andrew DeMott, Alex ... , USASherry Pagoto AuthorsSearch for Christine A Pellegrini in:PubMed • Google Scholar Search for Jennifer M Duncan in:PubMed • Google Scholar Search for Arlen C Moller in:PubMed • Google Scholar Search for

Make Better Choices (MBC): Study design of a randomized controlled trial testing optimal technology-supported change in multiple diet and physical activity risk behaviors

Background Suboptimal diet and physical inactivity are prevalent, co-occurring chronic disease risk factors, yet little is known about how to maximize multiple risk behavior change. Make Better Choices, a randomized controlled trial, tests competing hypotheses about the optimal way to promote healthy change in four bundled risk behaviors: high saturated fat intake, low fruit and...

Make Better Choices (MBC): Study design of a randomized controlled trial testing optimal technology-supported change in multiple diet and physical activity risk behaviors

McFadden, Jocelyn Vaughn, Andrea T Kozak, Malaina Smith, Arlen C Moller, Stephanie W Russell & Andrew DeMottDepartment of Psychology, University of Illinois - Chicago, Chicago, Illinois, USABonnie Spring ... Scholar Search for Arlen C Moller in:PubMed • Google Scholar Search for Leonard Epstein in:PubMed • Google Scholar Search for Stephanie W Russell in:PubMed • Google Scholar Search for Andrew DeMott