Tech can't replace human coaches in obesity treatment
Tech can't replace human coaches in obesity treatment.
Technology alone resulted in worse weight loss compared to tech and a telehealth coach.
A new Northwestern Medicine study shows that technology alone cannot replace the human touch in producing meaningful weight loss in obesity treatment.
"Giving people technology alone for the initial phase of obesity treatment produces unacceptably worse weight loss than giving them treatment that combines technology with a human coach," said corresponding study author Bonnie Spring, director of the Center for Behavior and Health and professor of preventive medicine at Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine.
The need for low-cost but effective obesity treatments delivered by technology has become urgent as the ongoing obesity epidemic exacerbates burgeoning healthcare costs.
But current technology needs to be more advanced to replace human coaches, Spring said.
In the new SMART study, people who initially only received technology without coach support were less likely to have a meaningful weight loss, considered to be at least 5% of body weight, compared to those who had a human coach at the start.
Investigators intensified treatment quickly (by adding resources after just two weeks) if a person showed less than optimal weight loss. Still, the study showed that the weight loss disadvantage for those who began their weight loss effort without coach support persisted for six months.
The study will be published May 14 in JAMA.
Eventually, more advanced technology may be able to supplant human coaches, Spring said.
"At this stage, the average person still needs a human coach to achieve clinically meaningful weight loss goals because the tech isn't sufficiently developed yet," Spring said. "We may not be so far away from having an AI chatbot that can sub for a human, but we are not quite there yet. It's within reach. The tech is developing really fast."
whether they produced clinically acceptable weight loss without support from a human coach.
Spring said scientists are now trying to understand what makes human coaches successful and how AI can better imitate humans in terms of content, emotional tone, and context awareness.
Surprising results
"We predicted that starting treatment with technology alone would save money and reduce burden without undermining clinically beneficial weight loss, because treatment augmentation occurred so quickly once poor weight loss was detected," Spring said. "That hypothesis was disproven, however."
Drug and surgical interventions are also available for obesity but have some drawbacks. "They're very expensive, convey medical risks and side effects and aren't equitably accessible," Spring said. Most people who begin taking a GLP-1 agonist stop taking the drug within a year against medical advice, she noted.
Spring said many people can achieve clinically meaningful weight loss without anti-obesity medications, bariatric surgery, or even behavioral treatment. In the SMART study, 25% of people who began treatment with technology alone achieved 5% weight loss after six months without any treatment augmentation. (In fact, the team had to take back the study technologies after three months to recycle them for new participants.)
An unsolved problem in obesity treatment is matching treatment type and intensity to individuals' needs and preferences. "If we could just tell ahead of time who needs which treatment at what intensity, we might start to manage the obesity epidemic," Spring said.
How the study worked
The SMART Weight Loss Management study was a randomized controlled trial that compared two stepped-care treatment approaches for adult obesity. Stepped care offers a way to spread treatment resources across more of the population in need. The treatment that uses the least resources but will benefit some people is delivered first; then, treatment is intensified only for those who show insufficient response. Half of the participants in the SMART study began their weight loss treatment with technology alone. The other half started with gold-standard treatment involving technology and a human coach.
The technology used in the SMART trial was a Wireless Feedback System (an integrated app, Wi-Fi scale, and Fitbit) that participants used to track and receive feedback about their diet, activity, and weight.
Four hundred obese adults between ages 18 and 60 were randomly assigned to begin three months of stepped-care behavioral obesity treatment, beginning with either the Wireless Feedback System (WFS) alone or the WFS plus telehealth coaching. Weight loss was measured after two, four, and eight weeks of treatment, and treatment was intensified at the first sign of suboptimal weight loss (less than .5 pounds per week).
Treatment for both groups began with the same WFS tracking technology. Still, standard-of-care treatment also transmitted the participant's digital data to a coach, who used it to provide behavioral coaching by telehealth. Those showing suboptimal weight loss in either group were re-randomized once to either of two levels of treatment intensification: modest (adding an inexpensive technology component -- supportive messaging) or vigorous (adding both messaging plus a more costly traditional weight loss treatment component -- coaching for those who hadn't received it, meal replacement for those who'd already received coaching).
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