Here is some of the text of the article:
It involved 291 people, mostly women, who in the previous two years had lost at least 10 percent of their body weight, an average of 44 pounds. They weighed 171 on average when the weight maintenance study began.
They were randomly put into three groups. The Internet and face-to-face groups met through online chat rooms or in person, respectively, with a weight-loss counselor weekly for four weeks and then monthly for 17 months. All submitted weekly weight reports and were counseled if they were in the "red zone," meaning they had regained 5 pounds or more.
The third group received counseling via monthly newsletters. Participants in all three were advised at the outset on diet and exercise, and were given scales and encouraged to use them daily.
A year and a half later, researchers checked on participants, assuming that those who dropped out of the program had regained 5 pounds or more.
They found that 46 percent of the face-to-face and 55 percent of the Internet groups were in the "red zone," compared with 72 percent in the newsletter group. The median weight gain was 2.5 pounds in the face-to-face group, 6 pounds in the Internet group and 10.4 pounds in the newsletter group.
. . . .
Among daily weighers, only 39 percent regained 5 pounds or more, but 68 percent of those who weighed themselves less frequently did.
The entire article is here:
http://www.cnn.com/2005/HEALTH/diet.....ap/index.html
I thought it was an interesting idea for a study, particularly since so many people advocate weighing no more often than once a week. Since I am still in the [slow] weight loss phase of my plan, I only weigh about once a week, but was wondering what anyone who has already reached goal thought of this study.


