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Maintaining Weight Loss

You need a plan to follow the diet Continuing to keep some focus on such behaviors is important and having a postweight-loss plan in place may be the key to long-term success. In a study, about 220 obese men and women who had lost an average of 15 pounds in a 15-week weight-loss program were assigned to either receive regular follow-up phone calls from dietitians for about a year or have no contact with professionals.

The purpose of the calls was to provide individualized support—so participants could refine and practice strategies to help them maintain weight loss. At the end of the 56 weeks, the group that received the support regained about 1 1⁄2 pounds on average, while the other group regained about 5 pounds. What are your strategies?

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The discussion focused on four strategies to help participants maintain weight loss: 1. recalling the positive things that happened because of weight loss. 2. setting a schedule for stepping on the scale and sticking to it. 3. make a plan for coping with situations that could trigger old, unsuccessful habits; and 4. identifying family members and friends who could offer support and determining what they could do that would be most helpful.

"Weight loss and weight maintenance are different processes,” says James O. Hill, Ph.D., director of the Center for Human Nutrition at the University of Colorado, who was not involved in the study. "The important takeaway from this study is rather than just focusing our efforts on weight loss, we should be trying to better understand how to help people keep off the weight they lose.”

DIY Weight-Loss Maintenance

According to Martica Heaner, Ph.D., adjunct associate professor of nutrition at Hunter College in New York City, who was not involved in the study, the main insight from the research is the need to preserve that focus on your body and behaviors, even once you’re done dieting. "Keeping yourself accountable and developing healthy new behaviors are the keys to lasting success.

There is no magic bullet, you can put some of the strategies tested in this study to work yourself in lieu of a formal support program. So, whether you’ve lost 10 pounds or 100: 1. Weigh yourself often. 2. Use sticky notes or calendar alerts to remind you to step on the scale. 3. Set a warning weight. If the scale creeps up by more than a few pounds—they used 3 pounds in the study—examine how your habits may have changed. 4. Address those changes or go back to the strategies you used to lose weight in the first place. 5. Know your triggers. Identify in advance any situations, such as parties or eating out, in which you’re prone to overeat, and make a plan ahead of time to reduce your risk. 6. Ask for help. In the study, having a support person was important, but because support looks different to different people, let those around you know what you need to help you maintain weight loss.

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