The Surprising Things You Shouldn’t Say to Someone Who’s Lost Weight
Trying to help a friend keep weight off after a diet sounds like a
good idea, but certain kinds of advice may actually have the opposite
effect, a new study from Greece suggests.
Researchers surveyed 289 people who successfully lost weight
and kept it off for more than a year, and 122 people who lost weight,
but then regained it shortly afterwards. Participants were asked
detailed questions about their diet, physical activity and the kinds of
support they received from friends and family.
Surprisingly, the results showed that people who
regained weight reported receiving more support overall from their
family and friends. Hoping to get to the bottom of this puzzling
finding, the researchers dug into the data, looking at each question
participants answered about the kinds of support they got.
They found that, for the "regainers", support often
came in the form of reminders about what they should and shouldn’t' do.
For example, compared to people who maintained their weight loss, the
people who regained weight reported more frequently that their friends
and family reminded them not to eat high-fat foods, or reminded them to
be physically active.
In contrast, people who maintained weight loss more
often reported that their friends and families just engaged in helpful
activities with them, such as eating healthy
or low-fat foods with them. Maintainers were also more likely to say
that their friends and family frequently complimented them on their
eating habits.
"Family and friends of people trying to maintain
weight loss could possibly be more helpful when offering their support
in the form of compliments and active participation, rather than verbal
instructions and reminders," the researchers, from Harokopio University
in Athens, wrote in the Jan. 22 issue of the Journal of Behavioral
Medicine. [The Best Way to Keep Weight Off]
It could be that people who've lost weight view
these reminders in a negative way, the researcher said.
"Well-intentioned support may be perceived negatively, as criticism and
meaningless reminders, by the person already struggling to cope with
weight management," they wrote in their study.
This would agree with findings from a previous
study, in which some women said that reminders to eat better or exercise
more made them feel worse, because they were already struggling to make
these lifestyle changes.
Still, the researchers can't explain what caused the
findings, and they noted that it's possible that friends and family
offer reminders only after they notice that a person is already starting
to put weight back on.
In addition, the researchers noted that some
of the differences between the regainers and the maintainers, although
statistically meaningful, were still relatively small.
The Surprising Things You Shouldn’t Say to Someone Who’s Lost Weight
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