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2010-02-22 10:49:29
Stephanie Pappas
LiveScience Contributor
LiveScience.com Stephanie Pappas
livescience Contributor
livescience.com Sun Feb 21, 4:16 pm ET
NBC's "The Biggest Loser" is all about records. In the past seasons, the
weight-loss reality show has repeatedly set new benchmarks for heaviest
contestant (454, 476 and 526 pounds), fastest 100-pound weight loss (seven
weeks), and most weight lost in one week (34 pounds).
The show, which takes obese Americans and pits them against each other in a
battle to lose the most weight and win $250,000, thrives on extreme numbers.
But physicians and nutritionists worry the show's focus on competitive weight
loss is, at best, counterproductive and, at worst, dangerous.
"They're taking people who have been inactive and are not in good shape and
boom, automatically subjecting them to this stress," Carol Wolin-Riklin, the
bariatric nutrition coordinator for the University of Texas Medical School at
Houston, told LiveScience. "Things are going to happen."
And indeed, things have. Two patients were hospitalized after collapsing during
a one-mile (1.6 km) foot race for the season 8 premiere. This year's season 9
opened with another strenuous challenge in which contestants raced 26.2 miles
(42 km) on stationary bikes. Show medical consultant and UCLA professor Rob
Huizenga had to drag one protesting contestant off her bike when she was
stricken with severe cramps. A second contestant, 526-pound Michael Ventrella,
was treated for exhaustion.
Health risks of obesity
The show's producers point out that contestants are under medical supervision
and say the extreme nature of the competition is inspirational for viewers.
And of course, there are serious health risks to being as obese as the Biggest
Loser contestants. According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
(CDC), obesity can increase the risk of heart disease, diabetes, high blood
pressure and certain types of cancer. The risks become more pronounced as the
obesity becomes more severe, and losing weight is a very good idea, said
Wolin-Riklin - if done right.
"The way I go about encouraging healthful weight loss is by working on changes
one at a time," she said. "By making these changes bit-by-bit I think you have
a better shot at having long-lasting lifestyle changes."
Real-life weight loss?
But weight loss on "The Biggest Loser" is far removed from weight loss in the
real world.
For one thing, contestants start out in worse shape than most. Seventeen of the
22 contestants have a body mass index (BMI) over 40, meaning they are severely
obese. In the "real world," more than one-third of U.S. adults, or 72 million
people, are considered obese with a BMI of 30 or higher, according to the CDC.
But research published last month in the Journal of the American Medical
Association found that the number of Americans with a BMI over 40 is just under
6 percent. In other words, the show's claim that the contestants are the
"epitome" of American obesity is a bit like saying that VH1's "Rock of Love
with Bret Michaels" epitomizes the American dating scene.
And then there's the exercise program. Contestants work out five to six hours a
day, eating strictly supervised diets. They routinely drop double-digit pounds
each week. The contestant who loses the smallest percentage of body weight can
be sent home.
In reality, said physician Robert Kushner, the clinical director of the
Northwestern University Comprehensive Center on Obesity, a safe rate of weight
loss is about one to two pounds per week.
"I think a lot of people can feel quite defeated that they're losing weight in
what we would call a recommended amount, but they would have been voted off the
show immediately," Kushner told LiveScience. "So the message, to me, is just
all wrong."
So is the science. Losing weight rapidly can be risky, according to Virginia
Tech professor of human nutrition, foods and exercise Janet Walberg Rankin.
Patients who lose weight quickly run the risk of gallstones, mineral
deficiencies, loss of muscle tissue and reduced bone density.
Beginning strenuous exercise suddenly can cause problems with hydration,
electrolyte balance and cardiac function. High impact workouts can put an extra
load on already-stressed bones. At least two contestants in Biggest Loser
history have struggled with stress fractures.
Regaining the weight
Risks aside, weight-loss experts say that the biggest problem with the Biggest
Loser is that extreme methods of dropping pounds are less likely to work in the
long run. Several former Biggest Loser contestants have regained some or all of
the weight, which doesn't surprise Kushner.
"They're not working with a trainer every day, they're not on national TV every
day, they're back to life," he said. "It's very difficult to sustain."
While researchers aren't sure if repeated cycles of weight lost and weight
gained are more dangerous than staying overweight or obese, the psychological
toll of failing to keep weight off can be grim, said Kushner. People often feel
like failures and become hopeless about their health.
Those looking for a safe way to lose weight or get healthier permanently should
make small changes, Kushner said, like gradually increasing exercise or
substituting healthy foods for unhealthy ones. In the real world, slow, steady
and committed wins the race.
"We're not looking for extreme makeovers in someone's lifestyle," Kushner said.
"We're looking for changes that they can sustain long-term."