A provocative new weight loss
approach asks women to not lose weight for the first eight weeks of the
program.
Researchers at the Stanford
University School of Medicine found women who spent eight weeks mastering
weight-maintenance skills before embarking on a weight-loss program shed the
same number of pounds as women who started a weight-loss program immediately. Moreover,
the “maintenance-first” women regained only 3 pounds on average a year later,
compared to the average 7-pound gain for the immediate dieters.
The study’s authors say that the
maintenance-first approach may offer a way to halt the cycle of yo-yo dieting. “Those
eight weeks were like a practice run. Women could try out different stability
skills and work out the kinks without the pressure of worrying about how much
weight they had lost,” said lead author Michaela Kiernan, PhD. “We found that
waiting those eight weeks didn’t make the women any less successful at losing
weight. But even better, women who practiced stability first were more
successful in maintaining that loss after a year.”
The study is published in the Journal
of Consulting and Clinical Psychology. Experts say that a modest weight
loss of 5-10 percent of body weight can significantly decrease the risk factors
for heart disease. However, for many, weight loss is often put back on in the
weeks following the diet. Over the years, Kiernan has interviewed both those
who have succeeded and those who have failed at keeping the pounds off. She was
particularly struck by one woman who said that she had never “maintained” her
weight in her life; instead, she was always either losing or gaining. “She had
no sense what she was aiming for,” Kiernan said. “We wanted to see if there was
a way to help people get away from this all-or-nothing approach that is
associated with losing weight.”
Conceptually, weight maintenance
may require a different set of skills and behaviors than those used for losing
weight. As such, Kiernan her colleagues came up with the idea to teach
weight-maintenance skills first so that people could experience how to
fine-tune their behavior in response to everyday pleasures and disruptions
rather than being “on” or “off” a diet. Weight stability skills include finding
low-fat or low-calorie foods that taste as good as high-fat/high-calorie
options to avoid feelings of deprivation and occasionally eating and savoring
small amounts of favorite high-fat/high-calorie foods.
Additional tips include weighing
daily to see how body weight naturally fluctuates from day to day; and
strategically losing a few pounds before a known disruption (such as a
vacation) to minimize its effects. Kiernan said the approach is designed to
help people make peace with the scale and learn how to pay “relaxed attention”
to their weight in ways that can be maintained over the long term — without
keeping food records. “Losing a significant amount of weight requires a lot of
focused attention to what you’re doing, and most people can’t keep up that
intensity over the long term,” Kiernan said. “For weight maintenance, we wanted
something that would make the day-to-day experience positive while not
requiring overwhelming amounts of effort.”
For the study, 267
overweight/obese women were randomized into one of two groups. The women in the
control group immediately began taking part in a 20-week behavioral weight-loss
program that encouraged greater intake of vegetables and fruit, increased
physical activity and use of proven dieting strategies, such as keeping daily
food records. The women attended weekly 90-minute sessions with a group
facilitator to learn problem-solving skills aimed at losing weight. At the end
of 20 weeks, they spent eight weeks using a similar problem-solving approach to
learn weight-maintenance skills.
By contrast, the women in the
maintenance-first group spent the initial eight weeks learning the stability
skills Kiernan’s group had developed. The women were asked not to lose any
weight during that time; if they did lose a few pounds, they were asked to gain
them back. Kiernan said this skill mimics a more real-world approach for
maintaining weight within a range of a few pounds, rather than aiming for a
single number on the scale. After the eight weeks were up, the women embarked
on the same 20-week weight-loss program as the women in the control group.
After both groups completed their
28-week programs, Kiernan said the results showed that the women on average
lost a similar amount of weight — about 17 pounds, or roughly 9 percent of
their initial weight. Once the weekly group sessions stopped, the women were on
their own for the following year. “We scheduled the weekly sessions to end in
October so that the women would have to navigate the holidays by themselves,
without any guidance from the group facilitators,” said Kiernan, the principal
investigator for the study. “We wanted this to mirror real-life conditions as
much as possible.”
When the women were weighed one
year later after no contact with their group facilitators, Kiernan said she and
her collaborators were pleased to see that the maintenance-first women had
regained only 3 pounds on average, compared to a 7-pound average gain for the control
group. She added that the 3-pound gain falls squarely within the personalized
range that the women were taught to use. Additionally, 33 percent of the women
in the maintenance-first group displayed what the researchers categorize as a
favorable pattern — that is, losing at least 5 percent of their body weight
without regaining more than 5 pounds over the course of a year — compared with
18 percent of the women in the control group.
Kiernan said the
maintenance-first approach, though sounding a bit unorthodox, could be a useful
tool for those who are trying to slim down and be healthier. “This approach
helps people learn how to make small, quick adjustments that can help them
maintain their weight without requiring a lot of effort,” she said.
Psych Central
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