Tirzepatide offers another "tool in the toolbox" as study demonstrates 20% weight loss attained in people with obesity without diabetes after a 12-week lifestyle intervention.
A new study shows that the primary problem with all diets may not be with the diet itself, but with dieters being unable to stick with them. Discover now which diet type yields the best short-term weight loss results and what you can do to stay on track with your dieting.
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Study Looks for Potential Stick-to-it-iveness Factors
A new study from the Univerersity of Pennsylvania School of Nursing was recently published in the
Journal of Clinical Investigation that reported their findings involving a range of diet plans and the factors that could lead dieters toward sticking longer to their weight loss programs and goals.
Optimizing dietary adherence to fight against obesity
While eating less and moving more are the basics of weight control and obesity treatment, finding ways to help people adhere to a weight-loss regimen is more complicated. Understanding what features make a diet easier or more challenging to follow can help optimize and tailor dietary approaches for obesity treatment.
A new paper from the University of Pennsylvania School of Nursing (Penn Nursing) analyzed different dietary approaches and clinical trials to better understand how to optimize adherence and subsequent weight reduction. The findings have been published in the
Journal of Clinical Investigation.
There is not convincing evidence that one diet is universally easier to adhere to than another for extended periods, a feature necessary for long-term weight management. Progress in improving dietary adherence could result from greater efforts to examine mechanisms underlying interindividual variability in responses to dieta
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Credit: Penn Nursing
PHILADELPHIA (January 25, 2021) - While eating less and moving more are the basics of weight control and obesity treatment, finding ways to help people adhere to a weight-loss regimen is more complicated. Understanding what features make a diet easier or more challenging to follow can help optimize and tailor dietary approaches for obesity treatment.
A new paper from the University of Pennsylvania School of Nursing (Penn Nursing) analyzed different dietary approaches and clinical trials to better understand how to optimize adherence and subsequent weight reduction. The findings have been published in the
Journal of Clinical Investigation. There is not convincing evidence that one diet is universally easier to adhere to than another for extended periods, a feature necessary for long-term weight management, says Ariana M. Chao, PhD, CRNP, Assistant Professor of Nursing at Penn Nursing and lead investigator of the paper. Progress in improving dieta