DROPPING a dress size after enduring a week of misery on a juice diet may seem worth it.
But crash dieters are being warned that such extreme measures simply do not work in the long run.
A study of 183 dieters shows it is better to adopt a tortoise-like strategy than to be like the hare and try to slim down too fast.
After two years, those content to patiently shed a pound a week were found to have lost significantly more weight than yo-yo dieters.
The studys lead researcher Dr Emily Feig, from Drexel University in Philadelphia, said: It seems developing stable, repeatable behaviours related to food intake and weight loss early on in a weight control programme is really important for maintaining changes over the long term. In the study, obese and overweight people were enrolled into a year-long weight loss programme using meal replacements and were told to cut their calories, exercise and eat more healthily.
Some lost a consistent amount in regular weigh-ins over the first six to 12 weeks, while others fluctuated.
The yo-yo dieters may have seen more exciting and dramatic results early on, but after a year they had lost less weight than those who were consistent. The difference was seen particularly in men.
The study found that dieting too strictly, in people with an all-or-nothing approach to eating, often leads them to lose their willpower and regain weight. It adds: Strict restraint has been associated with poorer long-term weight control.
The study, published in the journal Obesity, supports other research that a large majority of people who lose 5 to 10% of their body weight typically regain it. - Daily Mail
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It's been proven by experts: crash diets really don't work - Independent Online