They found two main things: «probable evidence for high intake of dietary fibre and nuts
predicting less weight gain [over time], and for high intake of meat in predicting more weight gain.»
Indeed, results of previous studies have shown that depressive or psychopathological symptoms in the primary caregiver
predict less weight reduction within the course of an intervention.9, 18,19 Nothing is known, however, of psychosocial factors that promote or constrain long - term outcomes of the interventions.
Not exact matches
«All else equal, a man who is 25 pounds below average
weight is
predicted to earn $ 210,925
less across a 25 - year career than a man who is of average
weight,» Judge and Cable point out.
From these analyses, we also
predict that normal -
weight women who breastfeed as recommended would retain ≈ 0.5 kg
less at 18 mo than would those who breastfeed for a short duration (< 1 wk), regardless of the amount of
weight they gained while pregnant (Figure 2).
With no good explanation for what causes the pounds to pack on, or a way to
predict who will gain
weight, physicians counsel all their teen DMPA patients to eat
less food.
The bottom line is that so far, every single study in which they added nuts to people's diets without trying to restrict calories failed to show the expected
weight gain — whether it was just
less than
predicted, no
weight gain at all, or they even lost
weight.
The result is when you don't eat enough, your actual
weight loss is
less than
predicted on paper, but
weight loss doesn't stop completely.
(2) Although eating prunes will cause
less weight gain than the calories that they contain would
predict, they are still extremely high in sugars, extremely high in calories, and prunes will cause
weight GAIN, not
weight loss.
The results have been as the science
predicted — lower blood glucose levels,
weight loss, improved blood lipid levels, better sleep, more energy,
less anxiety and depression, reduced reflux and indigestion and lower blood pressure.
RESULTS: Hierarchical regression analyses revealed that long - term success (at least 5 %
weight reduction by the 1 - year follow - up) versus failure (dropping out or
less weight reduction) was significantly
predicted by the set of psychosocial variables (family adversity, maternal depression, and attachment insecurity) when we controlled for familial obesity, preintervention overweight, age, and gender of the index child and parental educational level.