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In reply to the discussion: Why Fat-Shaming Is Wrong. [View all]athena
(4,187 posts)You can find that statistic everywhere. Here is one reference:
http://www.slate.com/articles/health_and_science/medical_examiner/2015/03/diets_do_not_work_the_thin_evidence_that_losing_weight_makes_you_healthier.html
"If youre one of the 45 million Americans who plan to go on a diet this year, Ive got one word of advice for you: Dont.
"Youll likely lose weight in the short term, but your chance of keeping if off for five years or more is about the same as your chance of surviving metastatic lung cancer: 5 percent. And when you do gain back the weight, everyone will blame you. Including you.
"This isnt breaking news; doctors know the holy trinity of obesity treatmentsdiet, exercise, and medicationdont work. They know yo-yo dieting is linked to heart disease, insulin resistance, higher blood pressure, inflammation, and, ironically, long-term weight gain. Still, they push the same ineffective treatments, insisting theyll make you not just thinner but healthier.
"In reality, 97 percent of dieters regain everything they lost and then some within three years. Obesity research fails to reflect this truth because it rarely follows people for more than 18 months. This makes most weight-loss studies disingenuous at best and downright deceptive at worst."