Authors
Julia Poncela-Casasnovas, Bonnie Spring, Daniel McClary, Arlen C Moller, Rufaro Mukogo, Christine A Pellegrini, Michael J Coons, Miriam Davidson, Satyam Mukherjee, Luis A Nunes Amaral
Publication date
2015/3/6
Journal
Journal of The Royal Society Interface
Volume
12
Issue
104
Pages
20140686
Publisher
The Royal Society
Description
The obesity epidemic is heightening chronic disease risk globally. Online weight management (OWM) communities could potentially promote weight loss among large numbers of people at low cost. Because little is known about the impact of these online communities, we examined the relationship between individual and social network variables, and weight loss in a large, international OWM programme. We studied the online activity and weight change of 22 419 members of an OWM system during a six-month period, focusing especially on the 2033 members with at least one friend within the community. Using Heckman's sample-selection procedure to account for potential selection bias and data censoring, we found that initial body mass index, adherence to self-monitoring and social networking were significantly correlated with weight loss. Remarkably, greater embeddedness in the network was the variable …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
J Poncela-Casasnovas, B Spring, D McClary… - Journal of The Royal Society Interface, 2015