Clinical & Professional Referrals · Darren Tebbenham, BSc, MSc

For patients who have
exhausted the
standard pathway.

Most weight management interventions address behaviour, nutrition, and medication. Very few address the psychological patterns and biological adaptations that keep patients stuck — even after significant clinical input. The 2.0 Method fills that gap.

The Clinical Gap

What conventional programmes
don't address.

Weight management interventions — dietary advice, exercise referral, GLP-1 medication, bariatric surgery — address the physiological and behavioural dimensions of obesity and metabolic disease.

What they rarely address is the psychological substrate underneath the behaviour. The identity. The patterns. The self-talk. The blind spots that have been running quietly underneath every intervention.

Without addressing this layer, relapse is not a failure of willpower. It's a predictable outcome. The body changes. The psychology doesn't. And over time, the psychology wins.

The 2.0 Method addresses this missing layer directly — and works best as a complement to, rather than a replacement for, clinical care.

86.5%
of gastric bypass patients regain more than 10% of maximum weight loss within five years of nadir
LABS Study · International Journal of Obesity · 2024
67%
of prior weight loss regained within one year of stopping semaglutide — in participants who completed 68 weeks of treatment
STEP 1 Trial Extension · Wilding et al. · PMC9542252
95%
of conventional diets fail long term — not because of the dietary approach but because of unaddressed psychological drivers
20+
years of applied work at the intersection of psychology, behaviour change, and weight management
45%
of weight lost on semaglutide comes from lean mass rather than fat in the STEP 1 trial — not purely fat loss
STEP 1 Trial · Wilding et al. · New England Journal of Medicine · 2021
65%
of patients without type 2 diabetes discontinue GLP-1 medication within one year in real-world settings
Rodriguez et al. · JAMA Network Open · 2025 · n=125,474
The Three Layers

What the 2.0 Method
addresses specifically.

The framework addresses three dimensions that standard clinical weight management programmes typically do not have the resource or remit to cover in sufficient depth.

Layer One
The Psychological Patterns
The four patterns — Perpetual Negotiator, Resilient Restarter, Weekday Warrior, Clean Slater — each require specific psychological intervention. Most patients present with a primary pattern that has never been named or addressed. The 2.0 Profile assessment identifies this before the first session.
Layer Two
The Identity Work
Behaviour change that doesn't reach the level of identity reverts under stress. The 2.0 Method specifically addresses the gap between "doing healthy things" and "being a healthy person" — the distinction that determines whether change is temporary or permanent.
Layer Three
The Biological Reset
Insulin control as the primary lever — moving patients from carbohydrate dependency to fat-fuel metabolism. A nourishment-centred rather than calorie-restriction approach that reduces cravings, stabilises energy, and makes sustained compliance significantly more achievable.
The Framework

How the 2.0 Method
works in sequence.

The four components run in a specific order. Psychology before biology. Identity before habit. This sequence is not arbitrary — it reflects the evidence base for what makes behaviour change durable in complex cases.

01
Component One · Foundation
The Code
Three psychological commitments that make everything else possible. Addresses the primary barrier in most complex cases: the patient is doing this for external reasons — compliance, family pressure, clinical advice — rather than from internal ownership. Until this shifts, all other interventions are limited.
02
Component Two · Transformation
The Shift
A two-stage psychological transformation. Stage 1 — The Mirror: the patient sees their pattern clearly, without defence, often for the first time. Stage 2 — The Vision: a vivid, emotionally real image of the transformed self that the brain begins to treat as a reference point. Visualisation and structured coaching questions are the primary tools.
03
Component Three · Biology
The Switch
Insulin control as the primary biological lever. Transitioning from carbohydrate dependency to fat-fuel metabolism using a nourishment-centred protocol — control carbohydrates, prioritise protein, dietary fat not restricted. Energy stabilises, cravings reduce, and the patient experiences the process as additive rather than restrictive.
04
Component Four · Permanence
The Rewrite
Habit installation at the level of identity rather than behaviour. Using evidence accumulation, anchor habits, and identity reframing to embed the new pattern in the automatic brain. The goal is a patient who maintains without effort because maintenance no longer conflicts with who they believe they are.
Referral Criteria

Patients most likely
to benefit.

The 2.0 Method is not appropriate for all patients. It works best with those who have sufficient insight and motivation to engage with psychological work, and who have typically already tried standard approaches without sustained success.

It is most effective as a complement to existing clinical management — not a replacement for medical treatment where that is indicated.

Not recommended where
Active eating disorder is present · Acute mental health crisis requiring primary psychiatric intervention · Patient is unwilling to engage with psychological exploration · Pre-contemplative stage — not yet ready to consider psychological factors
Patients with obesity who have failed multiple dietary and lifestyle interventions
Particularly where insight into emotional or psychological drivers is present
Pre-bariatric surgery — psychological preparation
Addressing patterns and identity before surgical intervention significantly improves long-term outcomes
Post-bariatric — weight regain or compliance difficulties
Where the surgical outcome has not been maintained and psychological drivers have reasserted
Type 2 diabetes — lifestyle modification support
The insulin-control protocol is directly relevant to metabolic management alongside clinical care
GLP-1 medication — during or post-treatment
Building the psychological and biological foundation that sustains outcomes when medication is reduced or stopped
High-achieving professionals with metabolic health concerns
Where standard approaches have been tried and failed and the patient has insight into the psychological dimension
About Darren Tebbenham

Background & credentials

My work sits at the intersection of applied psychology, behaviour change science, and metabolic health. I am not a clinician — I work alongside clinical teams rather than within them. My role is the psychological and behavioural layer that clinical programmes typically cannot provide at the depth required for complex cases.

I am happy to liaise with referring clinicians, provide progress summaries where appropriate, and work within a coordinated care framework. A GP or specialist liaison letter is available for all clinical referrals on request.

  • BSc Sport and Exercise Science · MSc Sport and Exercise Psychology Academic foundation in the psychology of human performance and behaviour change
  • Three years as a university lecturer in Exercise Psychology Teaching degree-level student teachers — translating psychological science into applied practice
  • 20+ years as a personal trainer, nutrition coach, and behaviour change practitioner Direct client work across the full spectrum of weight and metabolic complexity
  • Trained 3,000+ personal trainers and coaches internationally Applied psychological principles delivered to the next generation of practitioners
  • Author — The Psychology of Weight Loss and The Biology of Weight Loss Both available free at dt.coach/psychology
  • Clinical experience with obesity, type 2 diabetes, and post-bariatric cases Working alongside GPs, dietitians, and specialist teams
The Referral Process

What happens after a referral.

The process is straightforward. No forms, no waiting lists, no complex onboarding. An initial conversation is the starting point for everything.

01
Initial Clinician Conversation
A brief call or email exchange to discuss the patient's presentation, relevant clinical context, and whether the 2.0 Method is likely to be appropriate. No referral form required.
02
Patient Diagnostic Call
A free 30-minute call directly with the patient. Assessment of their pattern type, readiness to engage with psychological work, and fit with the programme. Outcome fed back to referrer on request.
03
Programme and Liaison
Patient enters 1:1 coaching or group programme as appropriate. Progress summaries and GP liaison letters available throughout. I work within rather than around the clinical relationship.
Get in Touch

Discuss a referral
or make an enquiry.

The best starting point is a brief conversation. No commitment required — just a discussion about whether the 2.0 Method is the right fit for your patient. All clinical enquiries are responded to within one working day.

For Clinicians
Discuss a Referral
A brief call to discuss a specific patient's presentation and whether the 2.0 Method is appropriate. Confidential. No obligation.
Book a Clinician Call
For Patients
Book a Diagnostic Call
A free 30-minute call to identify your pattern and assess whether the 2.0 Method is the right next step. No pitch. Just clarity.
Book a Patient Call
The 2.0 Method Framework
A one-page overview of the complete framework — suitable for sharing with colleagues or including in patient records. Download the PDF or view online.
Download Framework PDF →
For Practices, PCNs & Trusts
Working with a practice, PCN, or trust?

If you're considering the 2.0 Method as a structured pathway for a cohort of patients — as part of a weight management service, post-bariatric support programme, or GLP-1 adjunct — I'd welcome a conversation about what that could look like for your practice or network.

Book a Practice Enquiry Call →

All enquiries treated as confidential · dt.coach