Paper
Yo-yo dieting drives up obesity
Published 2004 · J. Warnert
California Agriculture
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Abstract
Yo-yo dieting drives up obesity D is not the answer to the nation’s obesity problem (see page 12), according to Joanne Ikeda, extension nutrition specialist at UC Berkeley. For many extremely overweight people, repeated dieting contributes to their weight gain. Ikeda surveyed 149 women who weighed between 200 and 600 pounds about their lifetime dieting practices. Contrary to the popular public belief that fat people make little effort to lose weight, she found that 60% of the women had dieted more than 11 times, and this figure increased to 83% for women at the highest weights. “The first time, they will lose a significant amount of weight, then regain a few pounds more than they lost. The second time it will be more difficult to lose weight. They won’t lose as much as the first time. The weight regain will be faster and greater than the first weight regain,” Ikeda says. The $30-billion diet industry encourages overweight people to keep on trying to lose weight and many continue the frustrating yo-yo pattern believing that eventually they will succeed. However, Ikeda said, research shows that few do. “My concern is that one of the things driving up the obesity rate is weight loss and regain in these individuals,” she says. “I think that once people have tried to lose weight three times and regained the weight each time, they should be encouraged to stop dieting before their weight goes even higher.” Ikeda says the focus should shift to health at every size. She recommends that overweight women exercise regularly and eat nutrient-dense foods amounting to approximately 1,800 calories per day. Such a plan will satisfy hunger with three reasonable meals plus snacks, in contrast to typical weight-loss diets of 1,200 to 1,400 calories per day. “The goal is weight maintenance, not weight loss,” Ikeda says. “This strategy will reduce the risk for chronic diseases, such as type 2 diabetes, coronary heart disease and stroke.” Ikeda found the subjects for her study by collaborating with the Sacramento-based National Association to Advance Fat Acceptance, and sending messages to mailing lists that reach overweight women. Complete results of Ikeda’s research will be published in 2004 in the Journal of the American Dietetic Association. — Jeannette Warnert ting in the garden pulling weeds uses more calories than watching television.” The nine-lesson classroom curriculum includes topics such as reading food labels, eating at fastfood restaurants and understanding the media’s influence. Students track their eating and fitness progress, and receive motivating incentives such as raffle tickets and prizes. The lessons are correlated to California Department of Education standards. Teachers can obtain the curriculum at http:// anrcatalog.ucdavis.edu or UC Cooperative Extension offices, and receive training and support from UC nutrition advisors. For information, call (530) 754 8051 or go to http://groups.ucanr.org/efnepyouth/index.cfm. — Jeannette Warnert and Janet Byron
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