Health
Make more friends to shed those extra kilos
Washington, Jan 29
Online dieters who log in
regularly lose more than eight percent of their body weight in six
months, a new study shows adding that the less users interacted in the
community, the less weight they lost.
"Our findings suggest that
people can do very well at losing weight with minimal professional help
when they become centrally connected to others on the same weight-loss
journey," said Bonnie Spring, professor in preventive medicine at
Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine.
The study is the first to use data from an online weight management programme to investigate social network variables.
The study also reveals which aspects of online social connectedness most strongly promote weight loss.
The users who did not connect with others lost about five percent of their body weight over six months.
Those
with a few friends (two to nine) lost almost seven percent and those
with more than ten friends lost more than eight percent.
"There
is an almost Facebook-like social network system in this programme where
people can friend each other and build cliques," said Luis A. Nunes
Amaral, professor of chemical and biological engineering in McCormick
School of Engineering and Applied Science.
"In this case, we found the larger your clique, the better your outcomes," Amaral explained.
The
online social support community approach could work in other areas of
behavioural medicine like depression and alcoholism, where in-person
meetings are recommended.
"Modern life is so complex and
stressful, to go somewhere for a meeting is often not practical. It is
hopeful that this alternative approach, of going online for support,
could work," Amaral concluded.
The study appeared in the Journal of the Royal Society Interface.