Abstract
Behavioral health has the opportunity to lead the way in using lifestyle interventions to address obesity and health disparities in people with serious mental illness (SMI) in the COVID-19 era. Evidence-based interventions for weight loss in individuals with SMI exist, and the field has developed strategies for implementing these interventions in real-world mental health care settings. In addition to promoting weight loss, lifestyle interventions have the potential to address social isolation and loneliness and other patient-centered outcomes among individuals with SMI, which will be especially valuable for mitigating the growing concerns about loneliness attributed to the COVID-19 pandemic restrictions on in-person encounters. In this commentary, we discuss practice, policy, and research implications related to using evidence-based lifestyle interventions for individuals with SMI during the COVID-19 pandemic and sustaining these programs in the long-term.
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Aschbrenner, K. A., Naslund, J. A., Reed, J. D., & Fetter, J. C. (2021). Renewed call for lifestyle interventions to address obesity among individuals with serious mental illness in the COVID-19 era and beyond. Translational Behavioral Medicine, 11(7), 1359–1364. https://doi.org/10.1093/tbm/ibab076
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