E-Counseling Helps Pre-Diabetes Adults Lose Weight
posted 04/30/03
Individuals who received e-counseling lost 4.8% of their original body weight
after participating in the Internet program, almost double the weight loss
experienced by individuals who were not counseled.
Weekly e-mail counseling helped adults at risk for type 2 diabetes lose more weight in a year than similar adults who followed an Internet weight loss program without e-counseling, researchers report.
E-counseled individuals also had smaller waistlines at the end of the program, but there were no significant differences in blood sugar levels between the two groups and no data on whether the weight loss in either group reduced the number of diabetes cases.
"The weight loss observed in the behavioral e-counseling group at 12 months is encouraging because weight losses of similar magnitude are known to reduce risk for diabetes," say Deborah F. Tate, PhD, of Brown University School of Medicine and colleagues.
Behavioral weight loss programs that feature face-to-face counseling have been successful in reducing diabetes in the past, but such intensive interventions are not always practical or welcomed by patients, the researchers said.
To test whether e-mail counseling might be a viable alterative, Tate and colleagues compared the effects of e-counseling among 92 overweight or obese adults with one or more other risk factors for type 2 diabetes, like a family history of the disease.
Half of the group participated in an Internet weight loss program in which they were asked to reduce their calorie intake and increase their exercise. Their Internet guidance included an online tutorial on weight loss, weekly tips and links to weight loss resources and e-mail reminders to submit their weight to the researchers each week.
The other half of the group participated in the same program but also corresponded via e-mail with assigned weight loss counselors during the program, who provided weekly feedback, recommendations and support.
The researchers said that
it is still uncertain whether e-counseling would have the same benefit for many
adults at risk for type 2 diabetes, including minorities and low-income
individuals, since most participants in the study were white, college-educated
and required to have computer access.
Source: Diabetes In
Control Dot Com: The study results appeared in the April 9, 2003, issue of the
Journal of the American Medical Association and was supported by the American
Diabetes Association.
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