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Study
Looks at Pounds
Shed with Weight Watchers
Excerpt
By Alison McCook,
Reuters
Health
Although following Weight Watchers appears
to help people shed more pounds than they would on their own,
people who followed the program for two years lost an average
of only six pounds, researchers said Tuesday.
But especially diligent participants
-- who attended at least 78 percent of the weekly meetings --
lost an average of 11 pounds after two years of the program, the
authors note.
The average weight loss among Weight
Watchers participants "is not very much in comparison to what
people hope they will lose, or what people need to lose in order
to reach the desired, svelte self," study author Dr. Stanley Heshka
told Reuters Health.
These findings suggest that people
who need to lose a significant amount of weight fairly quickly
for medical reasons may want to opt out of Weight Watchers and
similarly structured programs, said Heshka, who is based at the
New York Obesity Research Center, St. Luke's/Roosevelt Hospital
in New York City. In the program, participants attend weekly meetings
and receive guidelines for exercise and how to pick the healthy
foods and portions.
But these findings, published in
the Journal of the American Medical Association, do not suggest
that Weight Watchers holds no benefit for people struggling with
their weight, he added.
People enrolled in Weight Watchers
shed more pounds than did people who were simply provided with
information about smart eating and exercising, who lost, on average,
less than one-half of one pound after two years.
Furthermore, while, on average,
participants lost only small amounts of weight while enrolled
in the structured program, some lost much more, with the maximum
amount of weight loss reaching around 50 pounds.
The structured program "seems to
hold advantages over trying to lose the weight by yourself," Heshka
said.
For people who are not yet obese
but are experiencing an increase in weight, or have a family history
of problems that can be aggravated by excess weight -- such as
heart disease or diabetes -- a structured program like Weight
Watchers may have a significant impact on health, he said.
In some instances, "even small
amounts of weight loss, weight maintenance -- preventing yourself
from gaining more weight -- might be medically important," Heshka
noted.
"Whatever amount you can lose and
keep off represents a victory," he added.
Indeed, Dr. Catherine DeAngelis,
editor in chief of JAMA, agreed that losing weight via any method
is extremely difficult.
"Food intake is a habit," DeAngelis
told Reuters Health. "And it's very hard to change those habits."
She added that while Weight Watchers
and similar programs may work for some people, they clearly don't
work for everyone. Programs have the best chances of working if
they feel natural to the people following them, she noted, otherwise
the weight loss is too difficult to maintain.
"It works as long as you stay with
it," she said.
During the study, 423 men and women
between the ages of 18 and 65 were either given a number to call
to find the nearest Weight Watchers meeting and vouchers to attend,
or provided with two brief counseling sessions with a nutritionist,
then left to lose weight on their own.
In an interview, Heshka explained
that Weight Watchers funded the current study, and he hoped that
other weight loss programs will do the same.
"I wish that more commercial weight
loss providers would do studies like this with their programs
so the consumer could have some idea of what it is they're getting
for their money," he said.
In a related study, published in
the same issue of the journal, Dr. Deborah F. Tate of Brown University
and Miriam Hospital in Providence, Rhode Island and her colleagues
found that among people who followed a structured, online weight
loss program, email counseling helps.
As part of counseling, a trained
therapist would send participants frequent emails, answer their
questions, and track their dieting progress.
When 92 overweight people followed
the program for one year, those who received counseling lost an
average of 10 pounds, relative to an average of only 4 1/2 pounds
lost by those who did not receive counseling.
These findings suggest that people
who need a structured program that is more convenient than regular
group meetings -- which provide similar services to email counseling
-- might benefit from an online program that includes counseling,
Tate told Reuters Health.
"If convenience is one of the advantages
of the Internet, perhaps this type of approach might be something
we could use in the long-term in a convenient way for participants,"
she said.
SOURCE: Journal of the American
Medical Association 2003;289:1792-1798,1833-1836.
Reference
Source 89
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