Neuroanthropology

For a greater understanding of the encultured brain and body…

Archive for March 3rd, 2009

Carnivalia

Posted by dlende on March 3, 2009

carnival-barranquillaPodBlack Cat is hosting a happy face Encephalon, with mind/brain bloggers pitching in such posts as a colorful Whorf bias, the epigenetic regulation of stress (and not a happy story, this one), and how cognitive training works.

Health Business Blog is hosting this week’s Grand Rounds of medical blogging. From freak show to self-help salon, it’s got it all. Like waiving your rights to say bad things about your doctor on the internet (i.e, freedom of expression) and self-esteem and mountaineering!

moneduloides is hosting the Carnival of Evolution, including Darwin’s degenerates and explaining cancer through game theory.

And for more on the great Carnival/Carnaval in Barranquilla, you can get some photos and music here and the official Colombia site here.

Posted in Links | Leave a Comment »

Calories Not Diets

Posted by dlende on March 3, 2009

Have a favorite way to lose weight, one that has worked for you? As long as it involves cutting calories over the long term, then it will probably be effective. That’s the basic lesson from the latest research.
frank-sacks
Last week Frank Sacks, a Harvard professor of nutrition, and his colleagues published a major study in the New England Journal of Medicine, Comparison of Weight-Loss Diets with Different Compositions of Fat, Protein and Carbohydrates (full text). A total of 811 participants from Boston and Baton Rouge were divvied up into four diets with different emphases on protein and fat. The participants were then followed over two years. The conclusions, as summarized by Journal Watch, were:

Changes in weight and waist circumference at 6, 12, 18, and 24 months were indistinguishable among groups: At 2 years, only about 15% of each group had lost at least 10% of body weight. Attendance at group counseling sessions strongly predicted successful weight loss.

So there’s the catch! The weight loss was modest. As the Journal Watch title puts it, “Four low-calorie diets yield the same mediocre results. Dieters ate different amounts of protein, fat, and carbohydrate — but, after 2 years, most were still obese.” Still, many people would accept an average loss of 9 pounds and 2 inches less of waistline.

The main implication of this study is that calories matter, not diets. As Frank Sacks emphasized in a great interview on Science Friday, most research on diets has focused on the short-term. But weight loss is a long-term problem – and there calorie restriction is what really adds up. How to achieve that is a major issue, which I considered at length in a previous post on successful weight loss.

In the Science Friday interview Sacks himself ends up advocating a “very common sense approach – to have portion control, to cut out the highest calorie stuff you are eating, and getting some exercise. It’s all an integrated whole.” To that end, Sacks says that individuals should experiment with different diets to see what works for him or her.

On the research side, Sacks bluntly states that “we should move on from trying to figure out which diet is best.” Rather, we should examine why individuals vary so much in their response to weight loss programs. “The difference in individual response just overwhelms any possible dietary difference.”

Read the rest of this entry »

Posted in Applied Anthropology, Food & Eating | 6 Comments »

 
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