Yale School of Public Health, Department of Chronic Disease Epidemiology, New Haven, CT, USA.
Obes Rev. 2011 May;12(5):e236-43. doi: 10.1111/j.1467-789X.2010.00787.x. Epub 2010 Aug 26.
Unprecedented obesity rates are changing the burden of disease worldwide and obesity-related health complications are increasing healthcare costs. In response, researchers, clinicians and public health practitioners are seeking new and effective tools such as the Internet to effect weight loss. This review highlights peer-reviewed literature on randomized controlled trials that examine Internet-delivered weight loss and maintenance programmes. The scope of this review is broader than previous reviews, including more males and non-Caucasian participants. The reviewed studies show intervention results ranging from no weight loss to an average loss of 7.6 kg. It is difficult to draw a definitive conclusion on the potential impact of Internet-based weight loss as study methods are highly variable between papers, low adherence was recorded and not all studies include a control group. As the demand for low-cost, efficacious interventions that yield statistically significant and/or clinically relevant results grows, more rigorous, population-specific research is needed to determine if Internet-delivered interventions may slow or reverse with weight gain and obesity and the associated health consequences.
前所未有的肥胖率正在改变全球疾病负担,与肥胖相关的健康并发症正在增加医疗保健成本。为此,研究人员、临床医生和公共卫生工作者正在寻求新的有效工具,如互联网,以实现减肥。本综述重点介绍了关于互联网减肥和维持计划的随机对照试验的同行评议文献。本综述的范围比以前的综述更广,包括更多的男性和非白种人参与者。综述研究显示,干预结果从没有体重减轻到平均减轻 7.6 公斤不等。由于研究方法在论文之间差异很大,记录的依从性低,并且并非所有研究都包括对照组,因此很难对基于互联网的减肥的潜在影响得出明确的结论。随着对低成本、有效干预措施的需求的增长,这些干预措施能够产生统计学上显著和/或临床相关的结果,因此需要进行更严格的、针对特定人群的研究,以确定互联网干预措施是否可以减缓或逆转体重增加和肥胖及其相关健康后果。