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Health At
Every Size (HAES)
The following
is a reprint from Agricultural Research Service United
States Department of Agriculture website from March 2006:
Health At Every Size
New Hope for Obese Americans?
Healthy at every size?
What a concept!
The "Every Size" strategy, a health-centered rather than
weight-centered program, may help chronic dieters reshape
their thinking, shed unhealthy habits, adopt new patterns of
eating, become more physically active, and increase their
self-esteem. That's according to Nancy L. Keim, a chemist
with ARS.
"Chronic dieters are those who either have failed at a
sequence of diets, or, after successfully losing weight,
gain back the pounds and start the dieting cycle all over
again," explains ARS physiologist Marta D. Van Loan. "For
obese folks who can't find a healthful weight-loss regimen
that gives them lasting results, this alternative to
conventional dieting may offer greater and more sustainable
improvements to several key indicators of their health."
Keim and Van Loan are with the ARS Western Human Nutrition
Research Center at Davis, California. The two scientists
collaborated with Judith L. Stern and Linda Bacon of the
University of California, Davis, in a study of the "Health
at Every Size" approach.
Van Loan says the novel experiment rates as "one of the most
rigorous comparisons of conventional dieting versus the
Every Size lifestyle." The results? Remarkable improvements
for the obese, chronic dieters assigned to the Every Size
cohort, one of two teams for the study.
The Two Teams Square Off
Seventy-eight obese women, ages 30 to 45, participated in
either the health-centered Every Size team or the
weight-centered traditional diet team. The teams met for
specialized, 90-minute educational sessions every week for
the first 6 months of the year-long study, then met for six
once-a-month sessions.
Both groups were instructed in nutrition basics. Women on
the conventional diet track were schooled in topics that are
typically covered in many popular weight-loss programs, such
as how to monitor their weight, control their eating, and
exercise briskly.
Meanwhile, their Every Size colleagues learned how to build
their self-esteem; recognize and follow the body's natural,
internal cues to hunger and satiety (a feeling of fullness);
make healthy choices at mealtimes and in between; and enjoy
some form of physical activity, an approach that's different
from exercising mainly to lose weight.
Two Years Later: The Results
A total of 38 women, 19 from each team, participated in a
panel of follow-up exams, lab tests and questionnaires 2
years after the study's start.
Every Size volunteers had kept their weight stable, neither
gaining nor losing a significant number of pounds. In
contrast, the dieters had lost weight by the sixth month,
but regained it by the 2-year checkpoint. Their beginning
weights and their weights 2 years later weren't
significantly different.
The Every Size women held onto the progress that they had
made in several health risk factors such as cholesterol
levels and systolic blood pressure, the amount of pressure in
blood vessels when the heart pumps blood through them.
At the start and end of the study, total cholesterol and
systolic blood pressure were in the normal range for all the
women. Within this range, however, the Every Size women
lowered their total cholesterol and their systolic blood
pressure and were able to maintain those reductions for the
entire course of the study.
In contrast, the dieters didn't lower their total
cholesterol at any point in the study. And they weren't able
to maintain the healthful decrease in systolic blood
pressure that they had achieved just after the 6-month
reducing-diet phase.
Think "Physical Activity"
What about physical activity?
At the 2-year point, Every Size team members had nearly
quadrupled the amount of time they spent in moderate, hard,
or very hard physical activity, compared to what they had
reported at the study's outset.
The dieters didn't fare as well. At the 1-year point, they
were exercising more than at the start, but they didn't
sustain their improved level to the 2-year checkpoint.
Although all the dieters made a lasting improvement in at
least one of the food-related habits called "eating
behaviors," the Every Size volunteers improved in more of
the categories.
For example, both groups did a better job of regaining
control of their eating after they'd broken some
eating-related rule that they had imposed on themselves. But
the Every Size women made more progress "and sustained it" in
other facets of eating behavior.
The Every Size team members, for instance, had apparently
come to terms with issues such as bulimia (binge eating
followed by purging), a "drive for thinness," and
dissatisfaction with their body size.
Dieters made initial improvements in handling bulimia,
dealing with body size, and learning to follow the body's
natural signals of hunger and fullness, but they didn't
maintain the progress they'd achieved in these areas.
The researchers also monitored depression, a common problem
among large-sized women whose low self-esteem may be related
to their body image. Both groups made significant strides in
lessening depression, but only the Every Size women were
able to preserve a more optimistic outlook.
At the 2-year point, volunteers answered questions about how
helpful the program was to them. When asked whether they'd
continued to implement some of the tools they'd learned, 89
percent of the Every Size women answered "regularly" or
"often." Only 11 percent of the dieters did so.
Focusing on health and on changing behavior, instead of on
weight loss, apparently acted as "keys to the successes of
the Every Size team," Van Loan points out. The scientists
discuss these and other conclusions in an article in a 2005
issue of the Journal of the American Dietetic Association.
The National Institutes of Health and National Science
Foundation provided some of the funding for the study.
For many people, weight-loss diets "simply don't work," says
Van Loan. The Health at Every Size strategy "may break the
cycle of unsuccessful dieting" and "open the door to happier,
healthier lives."
By Marcia Wood, Agricultural Research
Service Information Staff.
This research is part of Human Nutrition, an ARS National
Program (#107) described on the World Wide Web at
www.nps.ars.usda.gov.
Marta D. Van Loan and Nancy L. Keim are with the USDA-ARS
Western Human Nutrition Research Center, One Shields Ave.,
Davis, CA 95616; phone (530) 752-4160 [Van Loan], (530)
752-4163
[Keim], fax (530)
754-4376.
"Health at Every Size: New Hope for Obese Americans?" was
published in the March 2006 issue of Agricultural Research
magazine. |
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