Thursday, January 22, 2009

Nutrition And Watching Sports On TV, Weight Watchers

How can you Root for your favorite team and enjoy your favorite party recipes?

To help Solidify your big win and avoid packing on the extra pounds, Weight Watchers recommends a flexible game plan for the big game.

Bob Goldberg, Weight Watchers meeting leader:

"Some little things can make a big difference, like substituting pretzels for chips, making dips with low-fat plain yogurt instead of sour cream, and getting up to move or even take a quick walk during half time. Favorite recipes can easily be made over to be better for you and just as delicious, like Weight Watchers' own recipes for jalapeno poppers or layered Mexican bean dip."

Weight Watchers International, Inc. Is the world's leading provider of Weight loss services, operating in 30 countries through a network of Company-owned and franchise operations. Weight Watchers holds over 46,000 Weekly meetings where members receive group support and education about Healthy eating patterns, behavior modification and physical activity.

Weightwatchers provides innovative, subscription weight management Products over the internet and is the leading internet-based weight Management provider in the world. In addition, Weight Watchers offers a wide Range of products, publications and programs for those interested in weight Loss and weight control.

Weighing Up The Benefits Of Weight Watchers Vs. Fitness Centers

In the first study of its kind, using sophisticated methods to measure body composition, the nationally known commercial weight loss program, Weight Watchers, was compared to gym membership programs to find out which method wins in the game of good health. A University of Missouri researcher examined the real-life experiences of participants to determine which program helps people lose pounds, reduce body fat and gain health benefits. The answer is that both have pros and cons and that a combination of the two produces the best results.

Participants who attended Weight Watchers for 12 weeks lost an average of 5 percent of their body weight, or about nine pounds. However, Steve Ball, assistant professor of exercise physiology in the MU College of Human Environmental Sciences, found that a large percentage of the lost weight was lean tissue and not fat.

"Participants' body fat percentage did not improve at all because they lost a much higher percentage than expected of lean tissue," said Ball, MU Extension state fitness specialist. "It is advantageous to keep lean tissue because it is correlated with higher metabolism. Losing lean tissue often slows metabolism. What your body is made of is more important than what you weigh."

The majority of other Weight Watcher studies had not considered body fat percentage change and only focused on body weight.

"This is one aspect of our study that makes it unique," Ball said. "We used a sophisticated measure of body composition - the Bod Pod - to look at what type of weight was lost: lean or fat."

In addition, Ball said the study was novel because Computer Tomography (CT scans) were used to investigate changes in abdominal fat, which is more predictive of cardiovascular disease. Although the fitness center group lost very little weight, they probably improved their health because they lost a significant amount of intraabdominal fat (fat around vital organs). These results imply that exercise may have positive influence on the metabolic syndrome despite the number on the scale, Ball concluded.

Ball also found that group support is very important. Most of the Weight Watchers participants stuck with the program during the duration of the study, while many of the fitness center participants quit.

"These results imply that overweight, sedentary women joining a fitness center with the intent of weight loss or body fat change will likely fail without support and without altering their diets," Ball said. "Nearly 50 percent of people who start an exercise program will quit within six months."

"This study attempted to discover what takes place in the real world when overweight women attempt to lose weight." Ball said. "I think the outcome of the study speaks volumes about the necessity for a multi-pronged approach in order to lose weight, body fat and gain health benefits. I hope that this will be the first in a series of studies investigating commercial weight-loss programs."