Opened 9 years ago

Closed 4 years ago

#253 closed defect (invalid)

Wing and colleagues conducted a multi-center

Reported by: anonymous Owned by: MatthewWhiting
Priority: normal Milestone:
Component: Building/Installation Version: 1.6.1
Severity: normal Keywords:
Cc:

Description

The Contact click to see the Web of Interest Certificate of Health People with overweight and obesity are often encouraged to lose 5-10% of their weight and are told that the weight losses of this magnitude help them improve factors risk of cardiovascular disease (CVD), improve blood pressure and cholesterol levels and blood sugar. However, studies that supported these claims were often limited sample size, focusing on non-diabetic individuals, and weight loss typically only presented as average weight loss and average reduction of risk factors, which is not, allows a careful analysis of the relationship between the magnitudes of specific weight loss and the consequent improvement in CVD risk factors. Rena R. Wing and colleagues conducted a multi-center, randomized study published in No. 34 of GC FIT 360 the journal Diabetes Care corresponding to July 2011 which examined the long-term effects of lifestyle interventions on cardiovascular morbidity and mortality in 5,145 Study participants Look AHEAD (Action for Health in Diabetes, for its acronym in English) were overweight or obese with type 2 diabetes who were randomly assigned

The Contact click to see the Web of Interest Certificate of Health People with overweight and obesity are often encouraged to lose 5-10% of their weight and are told that the weight losses of this magnitude help them improve factors risk of cardiovascular disease (CVD), improve blood pressure and cholesterol levels and blood sugar. However, studies that supported these claims were often limited sample size, focusing on non-diabetic individuals, and weight loss typically only presented as average weight loss and average reduction of risk factors, which is not, allows a careful analysis of the relationship between the magnitudes of specific weight loss and the consequent improvement in CVD risk factors. Rena R. Wing and colleagues conducted a multi-center, randomized study published in No. 34 of the journal Diabetes Care corresponding to July 2011 which examined the long-term effects of lifestyle interventions on cardiovascular morbidity and mortality in 5,145 Study participants Look AHEAD (Action for Health in Diabetes, for its acronym in English) were overweight or obese with type 2 diabetes who were randomly assigned

please have a look on this webpage =================>>>> http://www.musclestacks.org/gc-fit-360/

Change History (1)

comment:1 Changed 4 years ago by MatthewWhiting

Resolution: invalid
Status: newclosed
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