Want to Lose Weight?
Watch Those Portion Sizes
New study findings suggest that controlling
portion sizes may be the fastest route to weight loss.
The research shows that the "direct
route to losing weight is to constantly control your portions,"
study author Dr. Everett E. Logue, of Summa Health System in Akron,
Ohio stated.
"I am not saying exercise is not
important," Logue said. If the goal is to reduce calories, however,
it's "easier to skip a brownie" than to run four miles, he pointed
out.
The study evaluated 329 overweight
or obese 40- to 69-year-old patients using a model based on the
idea that behavioral change involves five stages: precontemplation,
contemplation, preparation, action and maintenance. Study participants
were categorized into stages for five target behaviors: portion
control, decreasing dietary fat, increasing intake of fruits and
vegetables, increasing planned exercise and increasing physical
activity.
Changes in all five behaviors led
to weight loss among the study participants, but decreased portion
sizes led to the greatest loss, Logue and his colleagues report
in the journal Obesity Research. For example, portion control
appeared to increase the chances of losing weight by almost four-fold,
while eating more fruits and vegetables was associated with just
under a three-fold increase in the chances of losing weight, the
report indicates.
By the end of the two-year study,
nearly one-quarter (23 percent) of study participants had lost
five percent or more of their initial weight, and 18 percent had
gained a similar amount.
Those in the action and maintenance
stages of behavior change for portion control -- that is, those
who began controlling their portion sizes at the start of the
study and continued to do so for the whole study period and those
who had previously begun to limit their portions and maintained
this behavior during the study -- lost nearly 38 percent of their
initial weight, the report indicates.
Participants who increased their
intake or maintained their increased intake of fruits and vegetables
for 24 months lost about 29 percent of their initial weight. Those
who consistently restricted their consumption of dietary fat lost
35.5 percent of their initial weight. And, the report indicates,
those who participated in more planned exercise for the duration
of the study lost 27 percent of their weight, while those who
consistently increased their normal level of everyday activity
lost about 31 percent of their weight.
Various studies point to the importance
of exercise in weight management, but "probably this (portion
control) was an easier way to lose weight," Logue said. Considering
the make-up of the study population, overweight and obese individuals,
it might have been "hard for them to start an exercise program,"
he noted.
Still, Logue said, "all behaviors
matter." He added that in order to lose weight, individuals must
either reduce the number of calories they consume or burn more
calories, but these practices "must be done consistently, every
day."
SOURCE: Obesity Research, September
2004.
Reference
Source 89
October 22, 2004
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