Regaining weight after weight loss
I don't think an overweight person who loses the weight ever can afford to drop their guard.' (June) Maintaining weight loss can be difficult to...
To be able to do that (climbing a hill) is like, well, gold medal and it’s all down to weight loss. That’s all it is. My bones were aching. My knees used to hurt. My hips were hurting. All that’s gone. It’s completely gone.’ Janet
For people who have a weight related chronic health condition losing weight will often have a beneficial effect on their health. Losing weight also reduces the risk of acquiring further health problems, such as:
The people we spoke to described a range of health benefits after losing weight, which we explore below.
In general terms, people said they ‘felt better’ after losing weight. Specific changes that were mentioned included:
Those who had lost weight noticed positive differences in their chronic health conditions, including:
Stuart lost weight before having a heart bypass operation. He found that when he weighed less, he didn’t have as much back pain or pain in his legs from sciatica. Tommy described how a combination of losing weight and regular swimming had greatly improved his arthritis.
Even those with severe symptoms of co-morbidities, like Joan, Maxine Mary and Janet, saw an increase in their energy levels, a reduction in medication, less pain and/or better mobility (depending on the severity of the condition). However modest, the impact of losing weight on their co-morbidities improved their quality of life and wellbeing.Although she could not see an effect on her arthritis, losing weight had been positive for Maxine Mary: ‘I feel so much lighter and fitter and there’s not so much pressure on my joints’. Joan was able to reduce her blood pressure medication and to walk a bit more but was well aware what would happen if she was to put on weight: ‘I’m sure my blood pressure would go up, my mobility would definitely decrease and it’s bad enough just now [laughs] I don’t do a great deal of exercise but I think it would have an adverse effect on what I’m doing just now’. Janet was able to reverse her liver disease, decrease her insulin dosage, and her asthma symptoms no longer affected her like they used to.
Those who ‘felt better’ after losing weight had often started to do more exercise, finding that exercise was easier or they had improved stamina. Sue X had so much more energy that she had started teaching Zumba four days a week! Losing weight and exercising in a safe environment under medical supervision made June X realise that she could exercise more without fear of injuring herself. There was a history of high cholesterol in Shirley’s family. She describes how losing weight helped her bring hers down: ‘So, we all went in, got checked on our own sort of thing and I think I’d lost, I was down to my second stone when it started to check, he said, ‘It’s really dropped.’ Because I was something like, I was something like seven point five and then I dropped straight down to six and then I went below the, with the next stone. So every time I was losing, the more I was losing, the obviously, the healthier I was eating, the better it was for my cholesterol.’ Losing even a small amount of weight can have noticeable positive effects on the health of people who are overweight or obese. Jane, who is on blood pressure medication, was recently diagnosed with type 2 diabetes, which motivated her to lose weight in order to manage her conditions. She started to do this by making small changes to her diet and so far, she has lost one stone and feels more energetic.Feeling better’ was not always just a physical thing, but could include feeling happier or more optimistic [see ‘Mental and emotional benefits of losing weight‘].
The physical and emotional benefits of losing weight could easily be reversed if people put the weight back on again. After her accident, Ellie found it difficult to continue with her weight loss programme and the weight crept back up again. As a result, the management of her type 2 diabetes is not as good as it used to be. In 2014, Ria lost weight and reversed her non-alcoholic fatty liver disease but her binge eating has led to an increase in weight since then. She is on blood pressure medication and worries about the prospect of needing to take insulin to control her type 2 diabetes.
I don't think an overweight person who loses the weight ever can afford to drop their guard.' (June) Maintaining weight loss can be difficult to...
I walk down the stairs and admire myself in the mirror. I think, I can't believe I look like this now. It's fantastic. Yeah it's...