Dieting
" that diet worked really well for me and I would've been able to keep it up had I had the chef to make the...
The most important lesson that the young people we interviewed have learned is that there is no ‘quick fix’ solution when it comes to losing weight. It can take many months or even years to achieve a target weight so patience is required. In this section, young people talk about their experiences of trying to lose or maintain weight and what has worked for them as an individual.
The young people’s experiences suggested that weight loss and keeping a healthy weight required them to change their eating and lifestyle habits.
Lifestyle changes that had helped young people lose weight included:
Changes to eating habits that helped included:
Every young person we talked to accepted that changing old habits was not easy. There was always the possibility of slipping back, particularly when excess weight didn’t drop off as quickly as they hoped. This tended to happen when:
But some young people were so scared of ending up ill because of their weight that they stuck with their new, healthier lifestyle and eating habits (see Health problems associated with being overweight).
For the young people who found it difficult to make these changes by themselves, the following helped:
A diet that promises massive weight loss in record time is short-term and usually leads to temporary results. A weight management programme aims to help people to lose weight and keep the weight off by permanently changing their eating habits and lifestyles.
We talked to young people who had just started a healthy eating programme and also to those who had finished it. Both groups reported a steady but gradual reduction of weight and size. Young people talked about setting up realistic targets on a long-term basis. Those who have been managing their weight for a long period were pleased with the results; one person had lost six and a half stone in two years and another about four stone in one year.
Being on a weight management programme was described by Duncan, as a ‘rollercoaster’ experience. His weight fluctuated up and down and some weeks it stayed the same which he found confusing. Those who joined a weight management programme especially designed for young people found that meeting others of similar age and with similar experiences (e.g. being bullied) helped them a lot.
Understanding the basics of nutrition helped young people to take responsibility for eating more healthily. Community-based weight management programmes for young people such as SHINE (Self Help Independence, Nutrition and Exercise), Watch it! (a programme delivered by Leeds Primary Care Trust and MEND (Mind, Exercise, Nutrition Do it! Programme) taught health and nutrition. This gave people:
This helped young people to both stick with healthy eating and to make progress toward achieving their target healthy weight.
Support from family and friends is crucial in helping young people succeed in achieving a healthier lifestyle and reaching their target weight. Many talked of how their mothers no longer cooked with cream or butter; how they included healthier options in the family shopping and allowed the young person to cook in a ‘healthier way’ for the whole family. In several cases a mother or father did a weight management programme alongside their son or daughter. But not everyone we spoke to felt they had the support of their parents (see Food and eating).
Parents felt that it was their responsibility to provide a healthy eating pattern but found it very frustrating when their children did not agree with their food choices. It could also be upsetting to see children try to lose weight and not succeed. Community-based healthy eating programmes were found to be very useful by parents too.
The experience of losing weight made young people confident in their ability to manage their weight both in the present and in the future.
" that diet worked really well for me and I would've been able to keep it up had I had the chef to make the...
" when I first went there [gym] I did three minutes on a cross-trainer and I was out of breath - I was sweating, it...