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It’s Official! Losing weight is no piece of cake

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WASHINGTON

 We all find it difficult to meet our weight loss resolutions, and now a new study has made it official that it is indeed tough to shed those extra kilos.

New studies by McMaster University researchers reviewed hundreds of recent studies published in the past decade about the prevention and treatment of overweight and obesity among children, among adults and about keeping lost weight off.

Regarding prevention of overweight/obesity among children and youth, a review of 90 studies found: There were small improvements in weight outcomes. The programmes that work best targeted school-aged children and youth, were delivered in educational settings, included both diet and exercise and lasted 12 weeks to a year.

Regarding treating overweight/obesity among children and youth, a review of 31 studies found: Evidence showed that enrolment in a programme that focuses on changes in diet, exercise and lifestyle can help reduce weight and, more importantly, enrolment in such a programme also improves health and quality of life in children and adolescents. However, the permanence of this weight loss has not been well studied.

Regarding prevention of overweight/obesity among adults, a search of more than two decades of research literature found: Almost no trials have been conducted to investigate programs that help normal-weight adults maintain their normal weight. A single small study conducted in the U.S. in the 1980s showed benefits from a 12-month education and incentive-based program.

Regarding treating overweight/obesity among adults, a review of 68 studies found: Doing some activity is better than doing nothing. Adults who took part in some form of treatment had, on average, a three kilogram (or seven pound) greater weight loss than adults who did not. Weight loss results did not differ whether treatments involved diet, exercise, lifestyle changes or drugs (orlistat or metformin), but the drugs had side effects that the other strategies did not.

A clinically meaningful weight loss of five to 10 per cent of body weight, which was found in this review, can positively impact the health of adults who lose weight.

Regarding keeping that weight off once lost, a review of eight studies since 2011 found: Doing something to keep that weight off, either through diet, exercise, lifestyle changes or even drugs, can help, at least in the short term. There just weren’t any studies addressing the long-term sustainability of weight maintenance strategies.

Use of drugs along with behavioural changes may help maintain a loss of five percent body weight, but this combined strategy did not make a difference in maintaining a loss of 10 per cent of body weight.

The study is published in CMAJ Open. — ANI

 

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