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Prepared Meals and Incentivized Weight Loss
Program for Overweight Women
Newswise, October 2010 — In another article
being released early online, Cheryl L. Rock,
Ph.D., R.D., from Moores UCSD Cancer Center,
La Jolla, Calif., and colleagues, conducted
a randomized controlled trial of weight loss
and weight maintenance in 442 overweight or
obese women (BMI, 25 – 40), ages 18 to 69,
over a two year period with follow-up
between November 2007 and April 2010.
The women were randomized into three
intervention groups: in-person, center-based
(167 women) or telephone based (164 women)
weekly one-to-one weight loss counseling,
including free-of-charge prepackaged
prepared foods (from Jenny Craig, Inc.) and
increased physical activity for 30 minutes a
day, five days a week.
The participants were eventually
transitioned to a meal plan that was not
based mainly on the commercial program.
The third group was the usual care group
(111 women) who received two individualized
weight loss counseling sessions with a
dietetics professional and monthly contacts.
All participants were provided a small
monetary compensation ($25) for each
completed clinic visit.
At 24 months, weight data were available for
407 of the 442 women (92.1 percent of the
study sample).
The average weight loss for the women
participating in the center-based group was
about 16 pounds or 7.9 percent of their
initial weight, about 14 pounds or 6.8
percent for the telephone-based group, and
about 4.5 pounds for the usual care control
group. “By study end, more than half in
either intervention group (62 percent of
center-based [n=103] and 56 percent [n=91]
of telephone-based participants) had a
weight loss of at least 5 percent compared
with 29 percent (n=32) of usual care
participants,” the authors report.
“Findings from this study suggest that this
incentivized structured weight loss program
with free prepared meals can effectively
promote weight loss compared with usual care
group,” the authors comment.
“Importantly, weight loss was largely
maintained at two-year follow-up.” They note
that even small percentage weight changes
can result in a reduction of risk for
cardiovascular disease and diabetes.
In conclusion the authors write: “For
clinical practitioners, the evidence
suggests that the structured program as
applied in this study provides another route
for their overweight and obese patients to
achieve and maintain weight loss through
behavioral changes for at least a two-year
period.”
Editor’s Note: Dr. Rock reported serving on
the advisory board for Jenny Craig from 2003
– 2004. The study was supported by Jenny
Craig, Inc. (Carlsbad, Calif.), which
provided program activities, materials, and
prepackaged food to individuals assigned to
the commercial weight loss program.
Funding was provided through a clinical
trial contract to the coordinating center
(School of Medicine, University of
California, San Diego), which subsequently
disbursed funds to the collaborating
clinical sites and the laboratories. Please
see the article for additional information,
including other authors, author
contributions and affiliations, financial
disclosures, funding and support, etc.
Editorial: Treatment Options for Obesity
In an accompanying editorial, Rena R. Wing,
Ph.D., from the Warren Alpert Medical
School, Brown University and Miriam
Hospital, Providence, R.I., writes, “… the
results of the trial reported by Rock et al
probably represent a best-case scenario.”
“The findings of this trial by Rock et al
raise the possibility that if structured
commercial weight loss programs could be
provided free of charge to participants,
both retention and average weight loss
outcomes might be far better than when
participants must pay for these programs.”
“Currently, insurance companies will often
cover the cost of bariatric surgery for
obesity (estimated at $19,000 - $29,000 per
patient from insurance reimbursement data)
but do not cover the cost of commercial
weight loss programs (such as that evaluated
in this study, with estimated costs of
approximately $1,600 for 12 weeks of the
program and for food.) Providing commercial
weight loss programs free to charge to
participants might be a worthwhile health
care investment.”
Editor’s Note: Preparation of this editorial
was supported in part by a grant from the
National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive
and Kidney Diseases. The sponsor had no role
in the preparation, review, or approval of
the manuscript.