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    Who Will Lose Weight? MDs Predictions Often Wrong

    If you want to know whether you’ll lose weight or not, don’t ask a doctor.

    In a new study, physicians predicted about 55 percent of patients would be "likely" or "very likely" to follow their recommendations for losing weight, eating healthier or getting more exercise. But three months later, only 28 percent of patients had lost at least two pounds, 34 percent were eating less fat and more fiber, and 6 percent were getting in one more hour of brisk walking each week.  

    It was surprising, researchers said, that in slightly more than half of cases, doctors said they believed their patients would follow their recommendations, because other work has not shown that physicians have that level of optimism about their patients' behaviors.

    Why the optimism? While physicians generally think patients are unlikely to follow recommendations, after talking with any given patient, doctors become optimistic that the patient will change, the study researchers say.

    The findings were published Feb. 7 in the journal Family Practice.

    Recordings of doctor's appointments

    More than 60 percent of Americans are overweight or obese, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

    In the study, the researchers made audio recordings of conversations between 40 doctors and 461 of their overweight or obese patients. The doctors and patients knew their conversations were being recorded, but were told only that the study they were participating in would look at how doctors "addressed disease prevention" with their patients — not that weight loss goals would be looked at, specifically.

    After each visit, physicians were asked questions such as: How likely will the patient follow your weight loss recommendations?

    When considering the patients who the doctors said would likely improve, most of the time, the docs got it wrong. Only 16 percent of those predicted to lose weight actually lost weight over the next three months. Of those that the doctors predicted would follow their healthy eating recommendations, only 19 percent actually improved their eating habits. Four percent of those predicted to get more exercise actually started doing so.

    The physicians were more often accurate in their guesses about who not improve.

    While previous studies had surveyed physicians about their expectations for their patients in general, none had asked doctors what they thought about specific patients immediately after an office visit, according to the study.

    Is optimism good?

    Doctors' expectations about their patients ability to change is important, because a doctor with low expectations "can lead to patients being less likely to improve their behaviors," the researchers said. When patients don’t improve behaviors, doctors' expectations only sink even lower, and a vicious cycle ensues.

    But physician optimism might have some bene?ts. "Patients might feel more con?dent that they can lose weight when they feel their physician believes they will change," the researchers wrote. However, this optimism might mean that the doctors are overestimating the effect their recommendations will actually have on patients, and could make doctors less receptive to learning effecting techniques for counseling patients, according to the study.

    This story was provided by MyHealthNewsDaily, a sister site to LiveScience. Follow MyHealthNewsDaily on Twitter @MyHealth_MHND. Find us on Facebook.

    What do you feel about this article?

     

    7 comments

    • Renee  •  3 months ago
      st doctors are arrogant enough to think "I know better" and "we" - the patient will listen. NOT. Many of us read the contradictory medical data and studies. One size does not fit all and that includes medicine and/or doctor advice.
      • Chris 3 months ago
        Unless you have been to medical school, the doctor does probably know better. So, really the doctors are not being "arrogant". More likely, it is the patient's arrogance that tells them they don't need to listen to someone who knows much more than they do. Doctors are not perfect, but I would rather take the word of someone who is educated in the subject rather than assume that I know best.
      • Mariah 3 months ago
        I'd say 8+ years of medical means that doctors and physicians DO know better. That's not arrogance, that's knowledge. They aren't perfect, but they sure know a heck of a lot more than the average person does about many many things.
    • Me  •  3 months ago
      Most people who are overweight and need to lose weight know it, it is not news to them. Just telling people to lose weight does not help. As a dietitian I can tell you it takes a lot of education and intense counseling to start seeing good weight loss results.
    • Trivia Jones  •  3 months ago
      It's time that the world realize that doctors and "scientists" are often frauds. They are more than often bigger boobs than my triple D's Lol!
    • Mac  •  3 months ago
      Lol are doctors supposed to believe that you are paying them for spewing out garbage and that their patients shouldn't take them seriously? It literally reads that doctors hope people will follow their advice to change their lifestyle and alot of them don#$%$ a pointless article...
    • spitting_sea_snake  •  Houston, United States  •  3 months ago
      I put in my normal daily calories and my stats and it said in two months time I'd weigh 40 lbs., and then I decided to see what would happen if I cut down my intake by having a few more fasts and watched the 40 lbs. estimate go to negative 20 lbs.. Something tells me that the new measure is an absolute joke.
    • Sgt. Slotter  •  3 months ago
      ohh cmon... everyone knows that doctors google your symptoms... they have no idea whats wrong
    • SisyphusSyzygy  •  Kennewick, United States  •  3 months ago
      I had been ill and had let myself go. Weighed in at 225. Decided to lose it. A year later, I weigh 175. How? Real simple. I didn't eat as much. Why is that so hard for people to understand?
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