BECCA E CARR, DREW A ANDERSON, CHRISTIAN R LEMMON, LINDA B ENGLER, AND KIMBERLY C BERGERON. Dietary and exercise interventions for juvenile obesity: Long-term effect of behavioral and public health models. Obes Res. 1997;5:257-261. We investigated the influence of nutrition and exercise interventions within cognitivehehavioral and public health formats on weight and blood lipid profiles in obese children. Compliance was also examined as well as the relationship of the compliance measures with clinical outcome variables. Three conditions were compared over 16 sessions: nutrition and eating-habit change followed by exercise (NE), exercise followed by nutrition and eating-habit change (EN), and an information control (INFO). NE and EN were presented in a cognitive/ behavioral framework which focused on the development of self-regulation whereas the INFO condition received the same material in a public healtMeducationa1 model. NE and EN participants evidenced modest, yet significant, reductions in weight and blood lipids, and the impact of these two interventions endured at a fiveyear follow-up. In contrast, INFO participants displayed stable weight and blood lipids during the course of the program, and most remained morbidly obese at followup. Improved nutrition, increased physical activity and fitness were significantly correlated with weight and lipid reductions.
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