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of
- assess for psychological wounds, and
reduce them |
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Study: Dieting Hardest for
Emotional Eaters
Reuters, via
Yahoo News, 11-9-07
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The Web address of this article is
http://sfhelp.org/research/01_emotional_eaters.htm
My links in this article will open a new browser
page or an informational popup, so
please turn of your
browser's popup blocker or accept popups from this
non-profit Web site.
This reprint is one of a series
of Web articles and reprints on family
-
-
understanding,
and
toxic
psychological
and...
-
raising family
in order to...
-
break the
pervasive [wounds + unawareness]
that is weakening our families and society.
These research findings support the premise that symptoms
of these wounds and related
are
public inability to control excessive weight and unhealthy
eating habits. These are increasing relentlessly among U.S. kids and adults. See
the commentary after this reprint for perspective on this
and links to similar recent research summaries.
- Peter
Gerlach, MSW
Pause and reflect - why are your reading this -
what do you
+ + +
Emotional eaters -- people who eat when they are lonely
or blue -- tend to lose the least amount of weight and
have the hardest time keeping it off, U.S. researchers
said on Thursday.
They said the study may explain why so many people who
lose weight gain it all back.
"We found that the more people report eating in response
to thoughts and feelings, the less weight they lost,"
Heather Niemeier, an obesity researcher at The Miriam
Hospital and The Warren Alpert Medical School of Brown
University, said in a statement.
"Amongst
successful weight losers, those who report emotional
eating are more likely to regain," said Niemeier,
whose study appears in the journal
Obesity.
The study included 286 overweight men and women who were
participating in a behavioral weight loss program.
A second group consisted of more than 3,300 adults who
have lost at least 30 pounds and kept it off for at
least one year.
Niemeier and her team analyzed responses to an eating
inventory questionnaire.
They focused on people who ate because of external
influences, such as people who eat too much at parties,
and people who ate because of internal influences, such
as feeling lonely or as a reward.
What they found
is that the more a person ate for internal reasons, the
less weight they lost over time.
"Our results suggest that we need to pay more attention
to eating triggered by emotions or thoughts as they
clearly play a significant role in weight loss,"
Niemeier said.
The study was funded by a grant from the National
Institutes of Health.
Copyright © 2007 Reuters Limited. All rights reserved.
Perspective
This NIH study
supports this nonprofit Web site's premises that...
-
"emotionally troubled" (psychologically
wounded) people
use unhealthy compulsions like
to comfort themselves, and...
-
they
are more prone to related emotional problems,
serious illness, and premature death than more
people.
This study doesn't comment on food/eating
addiction, or explore the likely
between signif-icant childhood
(i.e.
family environments) and the psychological wounds that
trigger unhealthy eating.
The study
authors conclude "...we (Americans) need to pay more
attention to (self-comforting eating)" and "weight
control." Like many other researchers, they stopped
short of examining
why so many adults and kids
need to distract and comfort themselves with chemicals
and compulsive activities like overwork, gambling, and
sexual excitement.
|
Premise
from 27 years' research:
compulsive overeating, obesity, and
unsuccessful dieting are epidemic
symptoms of the primary problem:
public apathy and denial of the silent toxic
[wounds + unawareness]
that causes unwise child conceptions,
inadequate parenting, and unintended child
neglect.
For three powerful ways
you can
help to break this epidemic cycle, see
this. |
For more
perspective, see these similar recent research summaries:
Eating disorders are a guy
thing too, study finds
"Fat and Happy" - Why
Americans Don't Diet
"Mental illness" starts
by age 14
Americans are
neglecting their health,
and...
Overweight adults and
kids are increasing in the US
Notice what you're
now. Recall why
you read this - did you get what you need-ed? If so,
what do you need to do now? If not, what
you
need? Who's
these questions - your wise
resident
or
+ + +
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October 06, 2008
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