Primary Outcome Measures:
- acceptability and adherence to the dietary intervention [ Time Frame: 6 weeks ] [ Designated as safety issue: No ]
Secondary Outcome Measures:
- weight [ Time Frame: 6 weeks ] [ Designated as safety issue: No ]
- waist circumference [ Time Frame: 6 weeks ] [ Designated as safety issue: No ]
- body mass index [ Time Frame: 6 weeks ] [ Designated as safety issue: No ]
An innovative dietary approach to obesity, based on the set-point theory of body weight and associative learning, was developed by Seth Roberts, professor of psychology at the University of California at Berkeley. The set-point theory was first proposed by G. Kennedy, who hypothesized that body fat, like body temperature, is controlled by a set point in a thermostat-like system. Based on this theory and subsequent work, Roberts hypothesized that people have a strong conditioned response to specific food items, which raises the weight set point, like a thermostat, stimulating appetite and storing the excess calories as fat. In an environment with attractive, easily accessible, inexpensive food, many people will gain weight. Roberts also hypothesizes that consistency in the presentation, labeling, and taste of mass produced food items today elicits a stronger conditioned response than in the past. Roberts's approach focuses on dissociating flavor and calories by consuming small amounts of very bland but calorie-dense foods such as extra-light olive oil or sugar water between meals. Roberts believes that the dissociation between flavor and calories lowers the body weight's set point, suppressing appetite and thereby inducing weight loss without causing hunger. Decreased oral intake naturally follows a decrease in appetite, without the hunger that normally quickly appears when people reduce their caloric intake, so people can eat an amount that feels comfortable without conscious dietary restriction. Roberts outlined this approach in a book titled "The Shangri-La Diet" because it is not really a diet at all. Given the originality of this approach, the successful outcomes accounted in the book and in anecdotes on the internet definitely warrant a closer look. Studying the feasibility of the Shangri-La Diet is particularly relevant to patients taking drugs that cause increased appetite and weight gain as a side effect, as increased hunger makes the usual calorie restriction approach even more difficult than it normally is. Low-income people have a diet higher in prepackaged standardized foods, which may be one contributing factor to their higher risk of developing obesity.
Specific Aims
- To test the acceptance of, and the patients' compliance rate to, the Shangri-La Diet
- To ascertain whether a controlled clinical trial of the Shangri-La Diet would be feasible.
- To see if the weight loss documented anecdotally in many people is reproducible in patients from low-income areas who are overweight and taking prescribed medications associated with increased appetite and weight gain.
Methods
2. Subjects will receive light olive oil, and capsules of fish oil and flaxseed oil, to take daily at home with weight based dosing, based on the doses recommended in Dr. Roberts' work. Doses are within the recommended dietary ranges to improve intermediate outcomes for coronary artery disease (HDL, LDL, and triglycerides) and ranges associated with a decreased risk of cardiac and all cause mortality in epidemiological studies. They will return weekly for measurement of weight, waist measurements, discussion of any problems with the oils, and dose adjustment of the oils.
3. Evaluation: At the end of 6 weeks of the intervention, the subjects will complete the same questionnaires as at baseline, and an evaluation form about the intervention.
Analysis: The primary end point will be acceptability of the dietary intervention as measured by the final interview and the evaluation form—is this something patients would be willing to do over the long term? Secondary outcomes will be changes in the participants' weight, waist measurements, anxiety, and depression scores.