“…Community‐based lifestyle interventions have attracted criticism due to their potential to increase health inequalities. Women and those with a more affluent life situation tend to be overrepresented, even though men, ethnic minorities, as well as those from lower social‐economic background tend to have higher risk of developing, for example, T2D (Gavarkovs, Burke, & Petrella, 2016; Harreiter & Kautzky‐Willer, 2018; Siegel et al, 2018; Sortsø, Lauridsen, Emneus, Green, & Jensen, 2018). Similarly, higher lifestyle intervention attrition has been associated with sociodemographic and cognitive factors such as lower educational achievement, ethnicity, younger age, higher BMI, unemployment, and lower self‐efficacy (Burgess, Hassmén, & Pumpa, 2017; Goode et al, 2016; Haughton et al, 2018; Leung, Chan, Sea, & Woo, 2017).…”