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12 Ways to Boost Diet Adherence

Help your clients stick to nutrition goals with these coaching strategies.

Family cooking for diet adherence

Research has shown that the best weight loss plan is the one people can stick with for the long term (Johnston et al. 2014). The science of diet adherence is far from complete, but a growing body of research offers clues we can piece together to help clients make nutritional behavior changes and keep to them.

While health and fitness professionals cannot influence all of the variables that affect people’s ability to change, there is plenty you can do to improve diet adherence and nutrition. Integrating these 12 strategies into your nutrition-related coaching sessions and programs will help build clients’ self-efficacy (i.e., confidence in their ability to sustain a dietary change).

1. Evaluate and Customize for Diet Adherence

Start by assessing readiness to change. Using this assessment, you’ll then tailor your nutrition recommendations to a person’s stage of change. One study suggests that low diet adherence can result when a client is not motivated to change (the precontemplation stage), lacks family and social support, or has a negative view or understanding of the recommended nutrition changes (Estrela et al. 2017)

On the other hand, people most likely to adhere to a nutrition change have already moved to the action or maintenance stages of change. They’re often older and more educated, with better baseline diets and exercise behaviors (Leung et al. 2017).

2. Educate With a Three-Step Model

When sharing nutrition information with clients, consider using the “elicit-provide-elicit” model to encourage change (Miller & Rollnick 2012). “Elicit,” the first step, uses open-ended questions, in this case to identify the client’s baseline dietary knowledge. “Provide,” the second step, means delivering information with the client’s permission, which builds baseline knowledge. In the third step, “elicit” means you’re assessing the client’s understanding of the information provided.

A low level of nutrition knowledge is associated with poor diet adherence, while increased knowledge is a facilitating factor for adherence (Estrela et al. 2017). “Elicit-provide-elicit” lets you deliver information in a way that supports autonomy and strengthens your therapeutic alliance.

3. Stay Flexible and Keep It Simple

Make sure the nutrition recommendations you provide are flexible enough to incorporate a client’s unique preferences. Include clear objectives, focusing on gradual changes and following up with a multiprofessional and interdisciplinary program (Estrela et al. 2017). The lower the complexity, the greater the therapeutic adherence.

Specifically, low diet adherence is associated with inflexible dietary plans that do not account for people’s preferences and whether they have negative views of restrictive eating plans. A more successful program takes into account a person’s beliefs, customs and concerns about treatment (Estrela et al. 2017; Van Horn et al. 2016).

4. Teach Clients to Self-Monitor

Self-monitoring is a great way to promote longer-term diet adherence to nutrition recommendations (Van Horn et al. 2016). Help clients find a sustainable way to track and monitor nutrition intake—through a food log (written or video), for example. Apps such as MyFitnessPal and MealLogger can help, especially when clients are in a social setting.

5. Teach SMART Goal-Setting for Diet Adherence

Clients can learn to set specific, measurable, attainable, relevant and time-bound goals. Initially aim for small, easily achievable behavior-oriented goals that focus on adding a new desired behavior, rather than taking away an old behavior. This helps to create successful experiences early.

For example, a SMART goal might be to eat fruit and/or a vegetable at each meal for the next week. Achieving one SMART goal sets the stage for continued success.

See also: Behavior Change: What the Research Tells Us

6. List What Works—and What Doesn’t

Together with each client, create a list of factors that will make the nutrition changes easier and other factors that might make them more difficult. This helps to identify strong supports for making the nutrition change and overcoming barriers.

7. Teach Relapse Prevention and Problem-Solving

Lapses are a normal part of behavior change. Help your clients identify scenarios that might trigger a lapse, such as a vacation or certain foods in the home, and then problem-solve how to address potential hazards.

Incorporating relapse prevention and problem-solving skills training into nutrition coaching sessions can enable clients to address the barriers to diet adherence (Middleton, Anton & Perri 2013) by providing a structured way to troubleshoot challenges before they happen.

8. Improve Cooking Skills for Diet Adherence

One study looking at adherence to the Dietary Guidelines for Americans (re: milk, whole grains, fruits, vegetables) in fifth-graders and nonrelated adult caregivers, for example, found that one of the biggest barriers for the adults was lack of skills in meal and recipe preparation (Nicklas et al. 2013). Incorporate cooking skills training into coaching sessions whenever possible or refer clients to other community resources that can help them build those skills.

9. Provide Long-Term Follow-Up

Diet adherence improves with programs that include follow-up once or twice a month in the year after an initial intervention (Middleton, Anton & Perri 2013). This follow-up need not be in person: Studies suggest phone and online counseling are nearly as effective and can reduce the cost of extended care.

In addition, programs that supervise and monitor attendance improve diet adherence by boosting accountability (Lemstra et al. 2016). Using multiple intervention methods (in person, virtual, group, individual) also has a positive effect on adherence (Desroches et al. 2016).

10. Build Social Support Into Every Program

Social support is not only critical to overall health; it also plays an important role in sustaining behavior change (Lemstra et al. 2016). Start by teaching clients how to build support in their personal lives for a behavior change, then help them recruit friends or co-workers who will change with them.

Programs can include a group-based intervention or peer coaches, “buddy programs” or social-support contracts—all of which have been shown to increase diet adherence (Lemstra et al. 2016). Programs can also lead to new networks created with social tools via the web or a smartphone app.

11. Practice What You Preach

A role model that already practices the desired nutrition behavior can increase a client’s motivation and self-efficacy, especially if the client considers the model trustworthy, admirable and respectable. One caveat: The client needs to believe the modeled behavior is something he or she can accomplish.

12. Help Clients Get What They Need From Diet Adherence

Sharing credible nutrition information is a major job function of most health and fitness professionals. After all, dietary intake greatly affects health, fitness and weight—common reasons for a person to seek out the expertise of a health and fitness professional to begin with. But information alone is not enough to shift nutrition behaviors and lead people to adopt healthier eating patterns. Clients succeed when health and fitness professionals help them access the necessary tools, support and skills to translate nutrition information into new behaviors—and ultimately to sustain a lifestyle change.

See also: Nutrition Adherence: Making Lifestyle Changes That Stick

References

Desroches, S., et al. 2016. Interventions to enhance adherence to dietary advice for preventing and managing chronic diseases in adults. Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews, (2), CD008722.

Estrela, K.C.A., et al. 2017. Adherence to nutritional orientations: A literature review. Demetra, 12 (1), 249–74.

Johnston, B.C., et al. 2014. Comparison of weight loss among named diet programs in overweight and obese adults: A meta-analysis. JAMA, 312 (9), 923–33.

Lemstra, M., et al. 2016. Weight loss intervention adherence and factors promoting adherence: A meta-analysis. Patient Preference and Adherence, 10, 1547–59.

Leung, A.W.Y., et al. 2017. An overview of factors associated with adherence to lifestyle modification programs for weight management in adults. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, 14 (8), 922.

Middleton, K.R., Anton, S.D., & Perri, M.G. 2013. Long-term adherence to health behavior change. American Journal of Lifestyle Medicine, 7 (6), 395–404.

Miller, W.R., & Rollnick, S. 2012. Motivational Interviewing: Helping People Change (3rd edition). New York: Guilford Press.

Nicklas, T.A., et al. 2013. Barriers and facilitators for consumer adherence to the dietary guidelines for Americans: The HEALTH study. Journal of the Academy of Nutrition and Dietetics, 113 (10), 1317–31.

Van Horn, L., et al. 2016. Recommended dietary pattern to achieve adherence to the American Heart Association/American College of Cardiology (AHA/ACC) guidelines. Circulation, 134 (22), e505–29.


Natalie Digate Muth, MD, MPH, RD

"Natalie Digate Muth, MD, MPH, RDN, FAAP, is a board-certified pediatrician and obesity medicine physician, registered dietitian and health coach. She practices general pediatrics with a focus on healthy family routines, nutrition, physical activity and behavior change in North County, San Diego. She also serves as the senior advisor for healthcare solutions at the American Council on Exercise. Natalie is the author of five books and is committed to helping every child and family thrive. She is a strong advocate for systems and communities that support prevention and wellness across the lifespan, beginning at 9 months of age."

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