Irish Daily Mail

Dieting can save your life – even if you’re still obese

- By Eleanor Hayward

LOSING weight slashes the risk of developing several chronic health conditions even if people stay obese, research has found.

A major study of more than half a million overweight adults found that going on a diet has significan­t health benefits.

Researcher­s found losing 13% of your body weight cuts the chance of developing type 2 diabetes by 42%.

It also reduces the chance of going on to develop high blood pressure or sleep apnoea, where your breathing stops and starts as you sleep, by one quarter.

People who lost weight also reduced their risk of getting hip and knee arthritis and high cholestero­l by one fifth.

The huge benefits were seen even when people remained obese, with a body mass index (BMI) over 30, after losing weight.

The study, presented yesterday at the European and Internatio­nal Congress on Obesity, was based on GP surgery data for 550,000 UK adults with an average age of 51, gathered over eight years.

Experts said the findings were a ‘wakeup call’ that proves the benefits of even modest weight loss in preventing devastatin­g diseases.

Professor Jason Halford, president elect of the European Associatio­n for the Study of Obesity, which runs the conference, said: ‘We ignore obesity at our peril. Weight management is clearly one of the best ways to control diseases including diabetes.

This study shows the importance of investing in prevention and support to help people lose weight now, rather than waiting for them to turn up in hospital with severe complicati­ons ten years later.’

The researcher­s, led by Danish healthcare company Novo Nordisk, weighed participan­ts four years after their initial measuremen­ts were taken, by which time 60,000 had lost at least 10% of their body weight.

The average weight loss in this group was 13% of body weight.

Many were still obese, but had lost enough weight for it to have a drastic impact on their health. The other 492,000 people had not lost weight.

Scientists compared the risk of developing six obesity-related conditions in the two groups. Study author Dr Christiane Haase said: ‘The difference in the risk of these conditions is striking and indicates that people with obesity could markedly reduce their disease risk through intentiona­l weight loss.’

The research also looked at the impact on heart attack risk, but found no significan­t reduction.

Professor Nick Finer of Novo Nordisk said: ‘Health policy has been much happier to treat diabetes when it develops rather than the obesity which causes it to develop. That is completely illogical. Now we have evidence that if you lose weight you can prevent these diseases – which are expensive to treat – from developing.’

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