Study Zeroes In on Calories, Not Diet, for Loss

Feb 26, 2009 12:29


Study Zeroes In on Calories, Not Diet, for Loss

“…For people who are trying to lose weight, it does not matter if they are counting carbohydrates, protein or fat. All that matters is that they are counting something.

That is the finding of the largest-ever controlled study of weight-loss methods published on Wednesday in The New England Journal ( Read more... )

diet, selfhelp

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Comments 8

tinymammoth February 26 2009, 19:31:43 UTC
The comments say that the so-called low-carb diet was 35% carbs, which is way more than most low-carb advocates would allow.

I thought that was sneaky of them, to present this study as though they were testing the low-carb diet without actually testing the low-carb diet.

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crasch February 26 2009, 19:46:20 UTC
Thanks for the heads up!

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zarex February 26 2009, 19:58:40 UTC
Great catch!

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ersigh February 26 2009, 20:24:50 UTC
This seems obvious to me.

I have read some studies that have found that which calories you cut out does matter, depending on the person. Some people simply respond differently to a low carb diet versus a low fat diet, etc. And there were the people who didn't respond at all, to diet or exercise. The particular study I'm thinking of, the people actually went to a camp for weight loss so the environment was more controlled and included both diet and exercise.

I think for the average person, cutting calories but being smart about which ones is still the best way to go. Fad diets... and going to extremes doesn't do anything except set a person up for failure.

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vyus February 26 2009, 21:24:26 UTC
this is what i think, too... for the average, mildly overweight person, composition probably doesn't matter as much. and some people do respond differently than others.

for an athlete or someone trying to move into better-than-avg body composition, what type of diet might matter more, too.

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ersigh February 26 2009, 21:48:25 UTC
Yeah, when I was working out a lot, I did a lot of reading on what would give me the best energy results pre-track day, and there did seem to be a difference in diet depending on what the goal was.

I have a metabolic issue so I can't lose weight by diet and/or exercise. I've always worked to maintained a healthy weight to avoid facing the mountain known as "losing weight".

I know a lot of people were freaked about the NY law of it being required that caloric value for all foods sold being placed where it could easily be seen (*ahem* Starbucks) but I think it's a fantastic idea. I don't think that the average person really understands how much they're eating... or they dismiss the calories in say, the average mocha (300+), because it's in fluid form.

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daphnep February 26 2009, 21:40:35 UTC
Hasn't anyone reading diet sources over the last couple of decades figured this out by now? The more important question seems to be, "can a person eat this way for the rest of their life?"

And that's going to vary person by person, eating plan by eating plan, depending on body, tastes, lifestyle, etc.

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fishsupreme February 26 2009, 23:21:28 UTC
I don't really see why "it turns out that if you eat less, you lose weight" should be a surprising or controversial finding.

And 140g of carbohydrates per day is "low carb" compared to the average modern American diet, but still high by evolutionary/paleontological standards and extremely high compared to something like Atkins.

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