FRUITS AND VEGETABLES GOOD, BUT NOT FOR WEIGHT LOSS
It is a commonly
recommended weight-loss tactic to increase the feeling of being full by
consuming more fruits and vegetables, but that may be another diet
recommendation dead-end, according to a new study from the University of
Alabama at Birmingham published in the American
Journal of Clinical Nutrition.
The recommended
daily serving amount for adults is 1.5-2 cups of fruit and 2-3 cups of
vegetables, says the United States Department of Agriculture's MyPlate
initiative.
Kathryn Kaiser,
Ph.D., instructor in the UAB School of Public Health, and a team of
investigators at UAB, including Andrew W. Brown, Ph.D., Michelle M. Bohan
Brown, Ph.D., James M. Shikany, Dr.PH., and David B. Allison, Ph.D., and Purdue
University investigators performed a systematic review and meta-analysis of
data of more than 1200 participants in seven randomized controlled trials that
focused on increasing fruit and vegetable intake to see effects on weight loss.
Their results show that increased fruit and vegetable consumption per se does
not reduce body weight.
"Across the
board, all studies we reviewed showed a near-zero effect on weight loss,"
Kaiser said. "So I don't think eating more alone is necessarily an
effective approach for weight loss because just adding them on top of whatever
foods a person may be eating is not likely to cause weight change."
Despite the belief
of some that increased intake of fruit may increase the risk for weight gain,
Kaiser says that was not the case at the doses studied.
"It appears
that an increase in servings does not increase weight, which is a good thing
for getting more vitamins and fiber in one's diet," Kaiser said.
While Kaiser
recognizes the importance of eating fruits and vegetables for their many other
health benefits, expectations for weight loss should be kept in check.
"In the overall
context of a healthy diet, energy reduction is the way to help lose weight, so
to reduce weight you have to reduce caloric intake," Kaiser said.
"People make the assumption that higher-fiber foods like fruits and
vegetables will displace the less healthy foods, and that's a mechanism to lose
weight; but our findings from the best available evidence show that effect
doesn't seem to be present among people simply instructed to increase fruit and
vegetable intake."
"In public
health, we want to send positive and encouraging messages and telling people to
eat more fruits and vegetables seems far more positive and encouraging than
just saying 'eat less.' Unfortunately, it seems that if we just get people to
eat more fruits and vegetables without also taking explicit steps to reduce
total food intake, lower weights are not achieved," said senior author,
David B. Allison, Ph.D., associate dean for science in the UAB School of Public
Health.
Because this
recommendation is so widely shared, Kaiser believes these results should bring
change to public health messaging.
"There are many
studies where people are spending a lot of money figuring out how to increase
fruit and vegetable intake, and there are a lot of healthy things that this
helps; but weight loss isn't one of them," Kaiser said. "I think working
on more multimodal healthy lifestyle interventions would be a better use of
time and money."
Kaiser says it is
important that more quality research be performed to investigate how multiple
foods may interact to create healthy weight loss that can be maintained.
"We need to
design mechanistic studies to understand these things better so we can help the
public be best informed and know what to do when it comes to weight-loss
efforts," Kaiser said. "Overly simplified messages don't seem to be
very effective."
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