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Conceptualizing weight management for night shift workers: A mixed-methods systematic review

Version 2 2024-06-14, 18:25
Version 1 2023-12-07, 03:49
journal contribution
posted on 2024-06-14, 18:25 authored by C Davis, Kate HugginsKate Huggins, S Kleve, GKW Leung, MP Bonham
SummaryShift workers have an increased risk of obesity and metabolic conditions. This mixed‐methods systematic literature review on night shift workers aimed to: (1) identify barriers/enablers of weight management; (2) examine effectiveness of weight management interventions; and (3) determine whether interventions addressed enablers/barriers. Six databases were searched, articles screened by title/abstract, followed by full‐text review, and quality assessment. Eligible qualitative studies documented experiences of behaviors related to weight change. Eligible quantitative studies were behavior change interventions with weight/body mass index outcomes. A thematic synthesis was undertaken for qualitative studies using the social‐ecological model (SEM). Interventions were synthesized narratively including: weight/body composition change; components mapped by behavior change taxonomy; and SEM. A synthesis was undertaken to identify if interventions addressed perceived enablers/barriers. Eight qualitative (n = 169 participants) and 12 quantitative studies (n = 1142 participants) were included. Barriers predominated discussions: intrapersonal (time, fatigue, stress); interpersonal (work routines/cultural norms); organizational (fatigue, lack of: routine, healthy food options, breaks/predictable work); community (lack of healthy food options). The primary outcome for interventions was not weight loss and most did not address many identified enablers/barriers. One intervention reported a clinically significant weight loss result. Weight loss interventions that address barriers/enablers at multiple SEM levels are needed.

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Location

London, Eng.

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Journal

Obesity Reviews

Volume

25

Pagination

1-18

ISSN

1467-7881

eISSN

1467-789X

Issue

2

Publisher

Wiley

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