Duke
Study Shows Monthly Personal Counseling Helps Weight Loss
DURHAM,
N.C. In the largest and longest study to date of weight loss maintenance
strategies, researchers at Duke University Medical Center found
that personal contact and, to a lesser extent, a computer-based
support system were helpful in keeping weight off.
The
results of the study appear in the March 12 issue of the Journal
of the American Medical Association.
The
results of this study send a strong signal to those who seem to
believe that obesity is such an intractable problem that nothing
can be done about it, says Dr. Laura Svetkey, professor of medicine
at Duke and the lead author of the study. Our research shows that
is not true. A large majority of the participants in the Weight
Loss Management study lost weight and kept weight off for two and
one-half years.
Svetkey
and researchers at four institutions around the country studied
1685 overweight or obese adults who were being treated for high
blood pressure, high cholesterol, or both. Scientists asked participants
to increase their activity level, reduce their calorie intake and
follow the DASH diet (Dietary Approaches to Stop Hypertension) for
a period of six months. The DASH diet emphasizes fruits, vegetables,
low-fat dairy products and whole grains, and has been proven to
lower bad cholesterol and blood pressure.
In
the first phase of the study, participants attended 20 weekly group
meetings with a trained interventionist who coached them on making
these lifestyle changes. Only participants who lost at least nine
pounds were admitted to a second phase of the study; 61 percent
met that goal, with weight loss ranging from nine to 66 pounds.
In
the second phase, 1032 participants were randomized to one of three
groups: a self-directed control group, where they were left to their
own devices to manage their weight; a personal contact group, where
they received monthly coaching and support from a counselor assigned
to them; or a computer-based, weight loss maintenance program that
offered the same counseling that personal contact offered, but in
a virtual, interactive format.
More
than 70 percent of the participants weighed less at the end of the
study than when they started. Those in the personal contact group
were the most successful, with 77 percent maintaining some weight
loss. The computer intervention group had a 69 percent success rate
and the self-directed group had 67 percent.
In
addition, 42 percent of the personal contact group was able to maintain
weight loss of at least 5 percent of their starting weight, an amount
of weight loss that has clear health benefits, Svetkey said. In
the other groups, about 35 percent were able to maintain this much
weight loss.
Overall,
however, the effects of the interventions were modest. At the end
of the study, the personal contact group had regained 3.3 pounds
less than the self-directed group. Those in the computer-based support
program fared almost as well at least for the first two years. After
that point, the virtual intervention lost its edge, and by the end
of the study, their efforts at maintaining weight loss were similar
to those enrolled in the self-directed control group.
But
Svetkey, director of clinical research at the Sarah W. Stedman Nutrition
and Metabolism Center at Duke, points out that even modest success
paves the way to major victory.
We
didnt set out to cure obesity, but we did want to offer participants
a set of tools they could use to change their lives, Svetkey said.
Its not easy to counteract all the forces around us that encourage
us to overeat and be sedentary, but we think this study moves us
in the right direction.
Svetkey
stresses that every pound lost can lower blood pressure and risk
of developing diabetes. Our patients have shown that under the right
conditions, long-term weight control is an achievable goal worth
pursuing, says Svetkey. Its also important to understand that its
not necessary to reach a normal weight to improve your health. The
focus needs to be on changing a lifestyle and sticking to it. Every
pound lost improves health.
The
study was funded by the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute.
Svetkey says it its notable that, unlike most other weight loss
studies, the Weight Loss Management study included a large number
of African-American participants (38 percent) and large n numbers
of men and women. Studies show that obesity is more prevalent among
African-Americans and the consequences of obesity are more serious
for blacks than whites.
Researchers
from Duke who contributed to the study include Carmen Samuel-Hodge,
Lillian Lien and Kathleen Aicher. Additional work came from scientists
at The Kaiser Permanente Center for Health Research, Pennington
Biomedical Research Center and Johns Hopkins Medical Institutes.
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