Weight Watchers New Year’s Day advert

Weight Watchers are running one of the longest adverts on British television, simultaneously on commercial channels, between 6.30pm and 7pm on January 1 2012. The advert was announced in the media so that coverage could start before the advert.

The advert (three minutes and 10 seconds long) is fronted by Alesha Dixon who has never had a weight problem in her life, but wrote the song for the advert. The cost of the New Year’s Day ad alone is estimated to be £15 million – to make the advert and to air it.

I open my book “The Obesity Epidemic: What caused it? How can we stop it?” with the following passage:

“In a study of formerly obese people, researchers at the University of Florida found that virtually all said that they would rather be blind, deaf or have a leg amputated than be obese again (Ref 1). That is the extent of our desire to be slim and yet two thirds of people in the UK, USA and Australia are overweight and one quarter obese. Why?”

People do so desperately want to be slim and I would encourage people to try anything (safe and healthy) that will work. However, the evidence does not support the claim that calorie deficit diets work. Indeed we have known the following since Stunkard and Hume quantified the failure rate in 1959:

“Most obese persons will not stay in treatment for obesity. Of those who stay in treatment, most will not lose weight, and of those who do lose weight, most will regain it.” Stunkard and McLaren-Hume’s own statistical study showed that only 12% of obese patients lost 20 pounds, despite having stones to lose, only one person in 100 lost 40 pounds and, two years later, only 2% of patients had maintained a 20 pound weight loss. This is where the often quoted “98% of diets fail” derives from. (Ref 2)

The Mail article about the New Year’s Day advert ends with this sentence: “The company launched its ProPoints weight-loss plan last year and in just 12 months its one million members in the UK have lost more than 11million pounds between them.” The maths is easy – one million members losing c. 11 million pounds between them means an average 11 pounds per member – in one year.

The famous calorie formula (which I show to be wrong at every level here and here) claims that, if we create a deficit of 1,000 calories a day (which is approximately the goal with Weight Watchers) we should lose 2lbs per week (7*1,000 = 2*3,500). And – that should be fat lost alone. More should be lost on top in water and, sadly, lean tissue/muscle. Hence, the precise weight loss for every single person, who stuck to weight watchers for the year before this advert, should be 104lbs in fat and approximately 15% more in water/lean tissue – i.e. 120lbs in weight. The actual weight loss was 11lbs per person – less than one tenth of what ‘should’ have happened.

This 11lb number keeps popping up. In a study funded by Weight Watchers and conducted (appallingly in my view) by a government body – The Medical Research Council (MRC) – it was found (for a fee of “almost £1 million” Ref 3) that dieters doing Weight Watchers lost an average of 11lbs in a year. (The link to the blog gives full details of this study and links to the original data from the MRC study).

When I wrote to seven UK government and obesity organisations (National Institute of Clinical Excellence (NICE), National Health Service, Department of Health, National Obesity Forum, Association for the Study of Obesity, British Dietetic Association and Dieticians in Obesity Management) asking from whence the calorie formula came (the 3,500 theory) and asking for proof that it was true, the only study that was sent back to me was this one:

The NICE document Management of obesity: Full Guidance, December 2006 was offered as proof of the formula. Table 15.14 in this document contains results of one study of 12 people, given a deficit of 600 calories a day, where the outcome was “a change of approximately -5 kg (95% CI -5.86kg to -4.75kg, range -0.40 kg to -7.80 kg) compared with usual care at 12 months. Median weight change across all studies was approximately -4.6 kg (range -0.60 kg to -7.20 kg) for a 600 kcal deficit diet or low-fat diet and +0.60 kg (range +2.40 kg to -1.30kg) for usual care”.

So, let me understand this, the people on the 600 calorie-a-day deficit (the NICE recommendation) were 5 kilograms (11 pounds) lighter than those not doing this “at 12 months.” Applying the basic maths formula, these 12 people should each have lost 600*365/3,500 = 62.57 pounds of fat. Not an ounce (of fat) more or less. AND, there should have been no range of results – everyone should have lost exactly the same (that’s what happens with a mathematical formula). The least anyone lost (let’s put it all into pounds) was 0.8 pounds and the most anyone lost was 17.2 pounds. Even the highest weight loss was 45 pounds lower than it should have been. This is also all about fat – we haven’t even started looking at muscle or water loss. This is also a study of 12 people. There are 1.5 billion overweight people in the world and we can’t prove a formula using 12 of them.

The other bit that the advert won’t tell you is the well documented regain with calorie deficit diets – the 98% failure rate – known about for at least 50 years. In the Weight Watchers funded study – the press release omitted to mention that regain was starting to show at approximately 9 months (see slide 8).

There is an excellent and exceptionally useful review presented in the Journal of the American Dietetic Association (2007). (Ref 4)  Marion Franz and seven colleagues performed a systematic review of 80 weight loss studies, grouped into eight different categories, including only those trials with a one-year follow-up. The studies were all from the period January 1997 and September 2004. 26,455 participants were enrolled in the studies. At the one-year follow-up, the attrition rate was 29% across the studies. Overall attrition was 31% at study end regardless of follow-up timing. The graph of results is shown in this thread in our club here. Notice, again, the regain at 6-9 months in all calorie deficit methods (the post explains the anomaly for the now withdrawn Sibutramine – the dark brown line).

Hence the evidence confirms that you are most likely to lose less than a tenth of what you expect – less than a pound a month over time, not 2lbs a week. You are also highly likely to start regaining at around six months. My book “Stop Counting Calories & Start Losing Weight” explains why.

If you have been doing calorie deficit diets (Weight Watchers, Slimming World, Rosemary Conley etc) for some time and are either a) not at your natural weight or b) one of the ‘lucky’ 2%, but finding you have to starve and obsess about food to stay there – you need to try something different. There is a way to lose weight and keep it off, without cravings or hunger and without feeling deprived. It is super healthy – focused on giving you optimum nutrition and no empty calories/processed food. You will understand why you have craved food in the past and how to ensure that you never do so again.

If you’ve been doing calorie deficit diets for some time and are not where you want to be and are planning to continue – you are mad! The definition of madness is doing the same thing again and expecting a different result.

References:

Ref 1: Colleen S.W. Rand and Alex M. C. Macgregor, “Successful weight loss following obesity surgery and the perceived liability of morbid obesity”, International Journal of Obesity, (1991). (The study results are presented in the summary of this book).

Ref 2: Stunkard A. and M. McLaren-Hume, “The results of treatment for obesity: a review of the literature and report of a series”, Archives of Internal Medicine, (1959).

Ref 3: http://www.thesundaytimes.co.uk/sto/news/uk_news/Health/article359154.ece The Sunday Times 1 August 2010.

Ref 4: Marion J. Franz, Jeffrey J. VanWormer, A. Lauren Crain, Jackie L. Boucher, Trina Histon, William Caplan, Jill Bowman, Nicolas Pronk. “Weight Loss Outcomes: A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis of Weight Loss Clinical Trials with a Minimum 1-Year Follow-Up”, Journal of the American Dietetic Association, (2007).

7 thoughts on “Weight Watchers New Year’s Day advert

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  • March 17, 2012 at 8:13 pm
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    ZOE

    Can I ask – you research obesity do you actually see any clients or do they have to buy a book. I have read your obesity book it is absolutely no use to any one. You never explain what you mean by real food so come put your money where your mouth is – explain what you should actually do to stay slim. Gary Taubes is the same – no practical use what so ever.

    • March 17, 2012 at 9:13 pm
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      Hi Peardrop – I used to see clients. I’ve not done so over the past year or so due to other commitments. The obesity book is not intended to be a diet book – it’s about the obesity epidemic and what caused it. The Stop Counting Calories & Start Losing Weight is the diet book – hope this helps
      Best wishes – Zoe

  • March 17, 2012 at 11:48 am
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    Again, great article and I only wish you’d said more about how the vast Weight Watcher’s business “empire” (it is a multi-billion dollar business in the US alone) is absolutely crooked and does not work at all.

    Your comment “doing the same thing over and over, and expecting different results is madness” could not be truer of WW. Their entire business model DEPENDS on failure — if their customers actually lost weight, became slim and “normal” in eating habits, then they would have gone out of business FIFTY YEARS AGO!

    They make their money from A. requiring you to become a member, at $14 a week (approx.) FOREVER, which gets you into meetings where you are weighed, then given a 30 minute pep talk and literally nothing else (a few recipes sometimes) and B. selling various PURE JUNK FOOD products, such as WW branded candy, snack bars, ice cream and so forth.

    For almost six decades, they have held the dominant and enviable position in US marketing, often spoken of glowingly by medical professionals and health “pundits” on US television and magazines, as “the sensible diet” — though it is a commonplace “calorie restriction” diet with an emphasis on proven failure of low fat foods (vs. carb restriction). IN that time, WW has refused always to reveal their actual statistics on how much weight clients have lost (they HAVE to know this, as they weigh every member weekly!) and dropout rates, and recidivism!!!!

    Of course, if people KNEW how poorly the WW plan worked, or that the junk food they peddle is actually making you FATTER and less likely to lose weight, nobody would join — and they’d go out of business.

    They desperately need to be exposed, yet in all this time, I’ve NEVER seen anyone challenge them or write an expose or even investigate the “American Dieting Industrial Complex” that is DIRECTLY involved in helping cause our obesity “epidemic”.

  • December 31, 2011 at 12:47 am
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    Many years ago in my early 30’s I was pushing 320lbs… I was in 52″ pants that were too tight (needing to move to a 54″) and got quite sick.

    Doctors decided it was my diet (I ate a lot of restaurant meals and fast food due to travel for work purposes), and they had me start reducing/eliminating things systematically, until the point I was literally told to consume nothing but CLEAR FLUIDS, and was consuming about 800 calories daily. I felt worse and worse, and amazingly was losing a little weight (about 2 lbs a week) but felt sicker and weaker every day.

    At this time I decided to get a differing opinion and bought a gym membership and enlisted the aid of a local personal trainer with a good reputation.

    The trainer wanted me to eat 2,800 calories a day. I told him that was impossible, that I wasn’t losing weight on 800 calories a day, how could I on 2,800… ?? He was emphatic and not only gave me the guideline, but several days of sample menu.

    I was asked to eat things like beef, pork, chicken, lots of non-starchy vegetables, some (limited amounts) of brown rice, some fruits (mostly berries), nuts, legumes and limited whole-grains. I eliminated all fast food, refined/processed foods and all sugars. He told me regardless of what I was told by doctors, to ensure I had at least 25-30% of my calories from FAT.

    Amazingly, I started feeling better AND lost weight. In fact, I dropped 80lbs in the first 3 months AND got stronger as well. That was 15 years ago and the concept of eating to lose weight still holds true today.

    I agree that there’s no way that calorie-deficit diets alone help you lose weight. I ate FAR more than anyone I knew that was “dieting” at the time, and lost considerably more weight. Now I personally follow a more LCHF (but not strict) approach than I did 15 years ago.

    As I do more and more research, I’m convinced the calories-in/calories-out myth is not only a myth, but one not based-on evidence – even anecdotal.

    This summer I needed to lose a few pounds (due to inactivity after a back injury), so I started cycling – I upped my intake to over 4,000 low-carb/high-fat calories a day to help fuel it, and lost my needed fat without any muscle loss. Even eating less than 100g of carb/day I was never tired – in fact I had MORE energy than before.

    Now I’m LCHF for life and my overall health markers continue to improve. I count calories, sure… but ONLY to ensure I eat; 1) enough, and 2) under 100g/carbohydrate daily.

    • December 31, 2011 at 8:00 am
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      Hi Glen – what an inspirational story! Thanks so much for sharing this. Low Carb High Fat – way to go!
      Very best wishes – Zoe

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