Health, Not Diets
Thank you for your business!You should be receiving an order confirmation from Paypal shortly.Exit Shopping CartTraining and workshops in the Non-Diet Approach
Training and workshops in the Non-Diet Approach
Blog
Blog
Blog
But there are significant risks for mortality with increased BMI!!
| Posted on January 12, 2017 at 11:50 PM |
From a fellow dietitian:
"I do believe there are significant risks for mortality with increased BMI, irrespective of diet. I have seen studies supporting that, so I don’t think it’s a slam dunk for embracing any level of obesity. See the latest BMJ systematic review for example:
http://www.bmj.com/content/bmj/353/bmj.i2156.full.pdf"
My response:
My fingers get twitchy when I see this kind of research used to justify recommending weight loss, but I see it all the time and I think it's important to unpack the details.
The meta-analysis you've posted is a good one and can tell us many things. Mainly it shows that a group of larger people is, on average, likely to have a shorter lifespan than a group of smaller people. Interestingly, this one shows that smoking appears to be worse for you if you have a high BMI. The identification of the nadir of risk is great news for people who have a lower BMI relatively effortlessly despite living in an obesigenic environment that causes 2/3 of the population to creep up in weight over time (ie genetic jackpot). The recent influx of big BMI and mortality meta-analyses interestingly comes in response to Flegal's paper from 2013 which found that being overweight conferred the lowest risk of death in an NHANES dataset, thus suggesting that larger bodies might not be as bad as originally thought. Anyway, I digress. There are far more interesting things for dietitians in this study.
Firstly, where are our intentional weight losers (ie including our clients)? Well, we don't know. Unless they are running separate analysis for those who intentionally lost weight into a lower BMI category we cannot tell whether they have the same risks as so-called 'never-fat' people and so we cannot say that weight loss delivers on it's promise. This study found that using highest adult BMI when analysing mortality resulted in even lower risks for the lower BMI categories. So this might mean that all weight loss is bad, or it might mean that there are so few healthy people losing weight, keeping it off and not dying early that the disease-related weight loser stats drown them out. Think about that for a bit: there are more people actively dying from disease to the point that they are losing weight than there are people who have successfully, permanently lost weight. Probably a bit of both is true. Bottom line: population studies showing how bad obesity is do not justify recommending weight loss; they just show that being overweight/obese confers risk. They say nothing about the merits of no longer being obese or about the risks of becoming obese. Clearly there are also issues with the assumption that being, or not being, obese is completely within individual control. The answers to these questions are waiting to be discovered, hidden in datasets until such time that obesity researchers stop trying to be weight loss agents. https://www.cambridge.org/core/journals/nutrition-research-reviews/article/a-review-and-meta-analysis-of-the-effect-of-weight-loss-on-all-cause-mortality-risk/26226C6DF1BA32BEB00AAC87FC416667" target="_blank">Here is another paper looking at the mortality risks related to intentional weight loss (spoiler: overweight people who intentionally lost weight had an 11% increase in mortality).
Secondly, the BMJ paper says that they did make adjustments for dietary quality and fitness. This sounds fabulous at face value, but I know this literature well and I wondered where on earth they found 230 BMI and mortality cohort studies that controlled for diet and exercise. So I nerded out in the supplementary material. Of the 230 studies included in the analysis, 59 controlled for physical activity (but not dietary factors), 10 controlled for dietary factors and physical activity, and 2 controlled for dietary factors (but not physical activity). People in these studies represented 7.7%, 3.8% and 0.062% of the total people studied respectively. I would not really consider that adequately controlled for food and fitness factors.
Accepting the findings of this paper, and those like it that do not properly adjust for food and fitness, means essentially that we are accepting that nourishment and fitness make no difference to mortality. Sedentary people with poor diets are lumped in with fit people with great diets within each of the BMI categories. Most of the studies included did not adjust for SES either. Does that seem fair or accurate? It makes a mockery of the work that we do every day to move people towards a healthier lifestyle. BMI does not measure dietary quality or fitness; we need to insist that studies do not continue to conflate BMI with health behaviours and actually measure the behaviours as endpoints instead. Studies that look at health behaviours independently of BMI find consistently that behaviours do make a difference to morbidity and mortality regardless of weight. Even if dietitians can't quite accept the futility of intentional weight loss, it might be helpful to think of focussing on health behaviours instead of weight as a form of damage control.
I used to do weight loss counselling in the early days of having my private practice. They would lose weight and I would feel great, they would feel great; it was celebration time. On the less frequent occasion of a client actually reaching their goal weight I had a spring in my step for days. It confirmed to me at the time that I must be a good dietitian and that dietetics really did have the key to lasting weight loss. I believed that those who weren't losing weight weren't following my plan or trying hard enough, so it was easy to label it as an adherence/noncompliance problem, not an issue with the way we were doing things in dietetics.
Becoming a researcher and working in academia involved the humbling process of accepting that my experiences and beliefs were not representative. Only seeing the 'honeymoon' phase of weight loss and devaluing the importance of my clients' previous (failed) weight loss attempts had lead me to have a distorted view of the effectiveness of dietetic counselling for weight loss. Unless a dietitian is following all of their clients for 5+ years it is likely that they suffer this same confirmation bias. In the absence of good quality research showing the 5 year outcomes of dietitian-delivered, individualised weight loss counselling, we have to accept that we are probably the same or worse than the well-funded, multidisciplinary, beautifully designed weight loss studies described in the literature which were used by the NHMRC in their review to conclude that long-term weight loss for the majority of people is unattainable.
Categories: HAES, Dietitian, Research
Post a Comment
Oops!
The words you entered did not match the given text. Please try again.
13048 Comments

mg/ - online pharmacy no prescription[/URL - resembling dismissing diflucan 150 mg tablet buy cenforce ciprofloxacin 500mg retin a cream pharmacy buy lasix grapefruit juice and levitra cheap hyzaar buy prednisone without a perscription pharmacy grey-white http://lovecamels.com/buy-fluconazole/ order fluconazole http://mrcpromotions.com/cenforce-online/ cenforce online http://nitdb.org/ciprofloxacin-500-mg/ cipro 500 mg http://umichicago.com/retin-a/ buy retin a online cheap buy retin a http://umichicago.com/cialis-online-pharmacy/ canada pharmacy online http://meilanimacdonald.com/buy-lasix/ overnight lasix http://oliveogrill.com/generic-levitra/ levitra 20 mg http://telugustoday.com/generic-hyzaar/ hyzaar http://mccarthyhs.com/prednisone/ prednisone w/o prescription http://secretsofthearchmages.net/canadian-pharmacy-cialis-20mg/ cialis canadian pharmacy synovitis, instances.

off white hoodie http://www.offwhitehoodie.us.com



supreme http://www.supremeclothings.com











ce/ - discount cialis[/URL - cerebellum, zanaflex 2mg cialis 20 mg lowest price levitra online kamagra propecia generic brand name cialis 20mg buy tadalafil online canadian viagra buy cialis uk canadian pharmacy cialis viagra 50mg when does cialis go off patent magnitudes accommodated wish, http://takara-ramen.com/zanaflex/ zanaflex canadian http://androidforacademics.com/cialis-20-mg-lowest-price/ cialis 20 mg lowest price http://csharp-eval.com/levitra-20-mg/ levitra 20 mg http://takara-ramen.com/kamagra/ buy kamagra online http://leemyles-boulder.com/propecia/ subaction showcomments propecia optional online http://thearkrealmproject.com/cialis-20-mg/ brand name cialis 20mg http://thebestworkoutplan.com/item/buy-tadalafil-online/ buy tadalafil online http://thearkrealmproject.com/buy-viagra-online/ viagra buy viagra online http://homeairconditioningoutlet.com/generic-cialis-canada/ generic cialis canada http://thearkrealmproject.com/pharmacy/ generic pharmacy at walmart http://postconsumerlife.com/walmart-viagra-100mg-price/ buy viagra cheap http://dallasmarketingservices.com/tadalafil-20mg-lowest-price/ discount cialis conduits venous.



ce/ - cialis tubs[/URL - [URL=http://androidforacademics.com/cheap-cialis/ - cialis in vendita[/URL - midtarsal prednisone buy online levitra 20 mg viagra on line ciprofloxacin drug interation sildenafil duetact online order duetact online buy zithromax amoxicillin 500mg capsules cialis samples for physicians online propecia propecia 1mg lasix to buy online no prescription 20 mg cialis tadalafil walmart promulgate soy http://takara-ramen.com/prednisone/ low cost prednisone http://umichicago.com/generic-levitra/ levitra 20 mg http://oliveogrill.com/item/viagra/ viagra pills http://mannycartoon.com/cipro/ buy cipro http://desireecharbonnet.com/duetact-online/ duetact http://telugustoday.com/zithromax/ buy zithromax online http://telugustoday.com/buy-amoxicillin/ buy amoxicillin http://scoverage.org/cialis-5mg/ tadalafil 20mg http://meilanimacdonald.com/generic-propecia/ propecia finasteride http://takara-ramen.com/furosemide-without-prescription/ heart and lasix http://dallasmarketingservices.com/tadalafil-20mg-lowest-price/ cialis comprar cialis without an rx http://androidforacademics.com/cheap-cialis/ cialis 20 bit, disorientation, temper.

or-me/ - low dose cialis[/URL - endomyocardial avoided generic cialis at walmart buy carafate online generic levitra 20mg priligy canada cialis online pharmacy what is amlodipine besylate 10mg cheapest cialis dosage 20mg price clomid cialis coupon buy prednisone on line compare cialis online why wouldnt cialis work for me weigh pancreatoduodenectomy http://frankfortamerican.com/generic-cialis-at-walmart/ cialis dosage 20mg cialis online pharmacy http://kelipaan.com/carafate/ carafate http://umichicago.com/generic-levitra-20mg/ levitra coupon http://frankfortamerican.com/dapoxetine/ priligy online usa http://umichicago.com/cialis-online-pharmacy/ pharmacy http://takara-ramen.com/norvasc/ amlodipine 5 mgm http://sci-ed.org/generic-cialis/ cialis http://happytrailsforever.com/clomid/ buy clomid http://biblebaptistny.org/cialis-coupon/ www.cialis.com http://meilanimacdonald.com/prednisone-20mg/ prednisone 20mg http://celeb-brand-agent.com/buy-cialis/ tadalafil 10mg http://gardeningwithlarry.com/drug/why-wouldnt-cialis-work-for-me
/ cialis usa deviated, myeloperoxidase excitation.
Oops!
Oops, you forgot something.