Medicare's search for effective obesity treatments: Diets are not the answer.
University of California, Los Angeles
Indexed incrossrefpubmed
Abstract
The prevalence of obesity and its associated health problems have increased sharply in the past 2 decades. New revisions to Medicare policy will allow funding for obesity treatments of proven efficacy. The authors review studies of the long-term outcomes of calorie-restricting diets to assess whether dieting is an effective treatment for obesity. These studies show that one third to two thirds of dieters regain more weight than they lost on their diets, and these studies likely underestimate the extent to which dieting is counterproductive because of several methodological problems, all of which bias the studies toward showing successful weight loss maintenance. In addition, the studies do not provide…
Citation impact
1,193
total citations
- FWCI
- 32.31
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 83
Citations per year
Authors
6Topics & keywords
Topics
Keywords
- Dieting
- Weight loss
- Obesity
- Low calorie diet
- Gerontology
- Environmental health
- Calorie
- Medicine
UN Sustainable Development Goals
- Good health and well-being
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