"There's hope for all those people who have tried to lose weight and have not achieved long-term success," says J. Graham Thomas, who has studied the habits of "successful losers" through the National Weight Control Registry at Brown University Medical School (nwcr.ws).
- Bio | E-mail | Recent columns
So, how did they take it off for good?
Writing in the American College of Sports Medicine's Health & Fitness Journal, Thomas boiled it down to "Seven Habits of Successful Weight Loss Maintainers."
1. Physical activity: Engaging in 200 minutes a week (average 29 minutes a day) of moderate-intensity exercise such as brisk walking.
2. Limit TV watching to under 10 hours a week (vs. 28 hours a week for the average American).
3. A low-calorie, low-fat diet with less than 30 percent of the calories from fat; use low-fat versions of dairy, dressings and sauces and artificial sweeteners such as diet soda instead of regular.
4. Consistency — relatively little food variety and the same pattern daily; no splurging.
5. Eat breakfast — but not high-fat bacon and eggs — to help curb hunger and prevent overeating later.
6. Avoid emotional eating and gorging; fast food meals limited to less than one weekly (compared with 2 to 3 for average Americans).
7. Monitor yourself. Weigh yourself weekly, track calories and/or fat grams; the Internet and smart phone apps make this much easier.
Got a bite-size tip on diet, exercise and well-being? Email ewarren@tribune.com.
