According to a new study released today by a team of
scientists at the Kaiser Permanente Center
for Health Research in Portland,
Ore., a notebook and your
keenness in keeping the evidence of your daily meals may be the key to losing
weight and having a healthier lifestyle.
The report was published in the American Journal of
Preventive Medicine and was conducted on 1,685 men and women aged 25 and older.
All of the people who took part in the experiment were either overweight or obese
and suffered of high blood pressure and increased blood cholesterol, two
frequent health problems related to extra pounds. Furthermore, approximately
half of them were African Americans.
More than two-thirds of the participants lost weight throughout
the duration of the analysis, which was sustained by the National Heart, Lung,
and Blood Institute. Overall, they discarded around 12 pounds each, not as much
as the majority of dieters hope to achieve, but sufficient to diminish their
blood pressure and cholesterol levels.
Their key to success was the fact that they attended weekly
group gatherings where nutrition and behavior transformations were explained
and promoted and, in addition to this, they kept a daily evidence of their
meals and physical activities, writing them down in special “food diaries”.
Victor J. Stevens, a senior investigator at Kaiser
Permanente and a co-author of the study, explained the influence of the notes
upon the motivation of the dieter by stating that observing the amounts of food
they had eaten, the dieters would learn to eat less and healthier in order to
achieve their goal.
|