The Sunday Guardian

Smartphone apps can help you lose weight

- CORRESPOND­ENT

Researcher­s have found that a behaviour-modifying app, when integrated with health system resources, can help obesity patients lose weight.

In the study, patients in a primary care clinic in the US used a free app called Track to monitor behaviour changes.

Based on the patients’ weight data, the app prescribed personally tailored, weight- related behaviour change goals. Patients were asked to weigh themselves daily using a cellular connected scale. It used interactiv­e voice response or text messaging to facilitate selfmonito­ring. The app delivered a personalis­ed feedback message with a short skills training tip, tailored to the participan­t’s progress.

The app, however, was not used in isolation. Doctors were well-versed in the app and dietitians also followed up with coaching calls.

Patients who used the app and received coaching calls fared much better after a period of one year than a control group that received routine care, showed the findings of the study published online in the American Journal of Preventive Medicine.

The study is among the first to report successful weight loss within a low- income population, said lead author Gary Bennett, Professor at Duke University in the US.

“This study shows we can help patients who are most at risk by embedding treatment in primary care settings and keeping patients engaged using a simple app,” Bennett added.

Most weight-loss research to date has focused on otherwise healthy people who just want to lose weight. Yet obesity very often exists side by side with other health problems.

For that reason, the researcher­s focused on obese people who were sick. In addition to obesity, study participan­ts suffered from either hypertensi­on, high cholestero­l or diabetes. IANS

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