| Literature DB >> 28852651 |
John Spencer Ingels1, Ranjita Misra1, Jonathan Stewart1, Brandon Lucke-Wold1, Samantha Shawley-Brzoska1.
Abstract
The role of dietary tracking on weight loss remains unexplored despite being part of multiple diabetes and weight management programs. Hence, participants of the Diabetes Prevention and Management (DPM) program (12 months, 22 sessions) tracked their food intake for the duration of the study. A scatterplot of days tracked versus total weight loss revealed a nonlinear relationship. Hence, the number of possible tracking days was divided to create the 3 groups of participants: rare trackers (<33% total days tracked), inconsistent trackers (33-66% total days tracked), and consistent trackers (>66% total days tracked). After controlling for initial body mass index, hemoglobin A1c, and gender, only consistent trackers had significant weight loss (-9.99 pounds), following a linear relationship with consistent loss throughout the year. In addition, the weight loss trend for the rare and inconsistent trackers followed a nonlinear path, with the holidays slowing weight loss and the onset of summer increasing weight loss. These results show the importance of frequent dietary tracking for consistent long-term weight loss success.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28852651 PMCID: PMC5568610 DOI: 10.1155/2017/6951495
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Diabetes Res Impact factor: 4.011
Figure 1Bar chart showing average weight loss in pounds across participants at each session.
Figure 2A scatterplot of total days tracked by total weight loss in pounds per participant.
Descriptive statistics across the 3 tracking groups: rare (<33% of days tracked, n = 25), inconsistent (33–66%, n = 5), and consistent (>66%, n = 15).
| Rare | Inconsistent | Consistent | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Gender | M = 7, F = 18 | M = 1, F = 4 | M = 5, F = 10 |
| College graduate | 17 | 2 | 3 |
| Income | Missing = 1 | Missing = 1 | |
| <25k | 4 | 1 | 3 |
| 25–50k | 7 | 0 | 9 |
| 50–75k | 5 | 1 | 2 |
| 75–100k | 6 | 0 | 0 |
| >100k | 3 | 2 | 0 |
| Mean days tracked (s.d.) | 43.2 (25.2) | 166.6 (30.2) | 294.9 (42.0) |
| Mean baseline weight in pounds (s.d.) | 225.8 (44.6) | 205.5 (71.9) | 202.3 (52.6) |
| Mean weight loss in pounds (s.d.) | −4.6 (7.7) | −4.1 (16.1) | −8.5 (12.9) |
| Mean baseline HbA1c (s.d.) | 6.97 (1.32) | 6.86 (2.22) | 6.65 (1.21) |
| Mean baseline BMI (s.d.) | 36.4 (6.3) | 34.9 (9.4) | 34.2 (7.6) |
M = males; F = females; s.d. = standard deviation.
Figure 3Predicted weight loss, in pounds, over time across tracking groups, from week 2 to week 49, holding all other variables constant. Inconsistent curve is not statistically different from the rare curve. Week 9 is the thanksgiving week and the beginning of the holiday season, and weight begins to climb. Week 33 is the beginning of summer (June), and we see weight start to drop again. However, consistent trackers do not experience these changes and sustain steady weight loss throughout the year. ∗Nonsignificant.
Comparison of model parameters (standard error) across the null, control, and final models on final weight outcome in pounds.
| Null model | Control model | Final model | |
|---|---|---|---|
|
| |||
| Intercept2 | −4.69 (1.75)a | −4.58 (1.88)b | −2.40 (2.29) |
| Wk-1 loss | −0.37 (0.65) | 0.03 (0.62) | |
| BMI_0 | −0.39 (0.25) | −0.45 (0.23) | |
| HbA1c_0 | 1.00 (1.28) | 0.49 (1.20) | |
| Gender | 0.33 (3.83) | 1.49 (3.56) | |
| Inconsistent | 4.97 (5.15) | ||
| Consistent | −7.59 (3.60)b | ||
|
| |||
| Intercept2 | −0.53 (0.07)a | −0.46 (0.08)a | −0.61 (0.12)a |
| Wk-1 loss | 0.01 (0.03) | 0.003 (0.03) | |
| BMI_0 | −0.01 (0.01) | −0.01 (0.01) | |
| HbA1c_0 | −0.01 (0.05) | −0.002 (0.05) | |
| Gender | 0.30 (0.16) | 0.28 (0.23) | |
| Inconsistent | 0.42 (0.23) | ||
| Consistent | 0.22 (0.16) | ||
|
| |||
| Intercept2 | −0.02 (0.003)a | −0.02 (0.004)a | −0.03 (0.01)a |
| Wk-1 loss | 0.0004 (0.001) | −0.0007 (0.001) | |
| BMI_0 | 0.0002 (0.0005) | 0.0004 (0.0005) | |
| HbA1c_0 | −0.004 (0.002) | −0.003 (0.002) | |
| Gender | 0.007 (0.007) | 0.004 (0.008) | |
| Inconsistent | 0.016 (0.01) | ||
| Consistent | 0.024 (0.007)a | ||
|
| |||
| Intercept2 | −0.0002 (0.00005)a | −0.0002 (0.00005)a | −0.0003 (0.00007)a |
| Wk-1 loss | −0.0000 (0.00002) | −0.00002 (0.00002) | |
| BMI_0 | 0.00001 (0.00001) | 0.00001 (0.00001) | |
| HbA1c_0 | −0.00006 (0.00003) | −0.00005 (0.00003) | |
| Gender | 0.00002 (0.0001) | −0.00002 (0.0001) | |
| Inconsistent | 0.0002 (0.0002) | ||
| Consistent | 0.0003 (0.0001)a |
a p < 0.01, bp < 0.05, (standard error).