Sairanen, E., Lappalainen, R., Lapveteläinen, A., Tolvanen, A., & Karhunen, L. (2014). Flexibility in weight management. Eating behaviors, 15(2), 218-224.
The purpose of the study was to investigate the relationships between changes in flexible
	vs. rigid restraints of eating during weight management, as well as how changes in the
	cognitive restraint of eating were related to psychological well-being and flexibility. The
	data includes information on 49 overweight persons who participated in a weight loss and
	maintenance (WLM) intervention and a follow-up assessment after 8–9 months.
	An increase in flexible cognitive restraint during the weight loss intervention was
	related to better weight loss maintenance and well-being. The more flexible restraint
	increased during the WLM intervention, the more psychological distress decreased.
	Moreover, larger reduction of rigid restraint during the follow-up period (between the
	WLM intervention and the follow-up assessment) was related to a better maintenance of
	improved psychological well-being at the follow-up endpoint. These results suggest that
	increasing flexible control while reducing rigid control of eating after an active weight
	loss phase improves success in weight management and the psychological well-being of
	weight losers.
	 
