{"id":3129,"date":"2013-04-19T00:00:00","date_gmt":"2013-04-19T00:00:00","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/1millionbestdownloads.com\/weight-loss-weight-watchers-vs-the-gym-new-study-reveals-which-one-you-should-join\/"},"modified":"2013-04-19T00:00:00","modified_gmt":"2013-04-19T00:00:00","slug":"weight-loss-weight-watchers-vs-the-gym-new-study-reveals-which-one-you-should-join","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/1millionbestdownloads.com\/weight-loss-weight-watchers-vs-the-gym-new-study-reveals-which-one-you-should-join\/","title":{"rendered":"Weight Watchers vs. the Gym: New Study Reveals Which One You Should Join"},"content":{"rendered":"
I love food. As far as watching my weight goes, I'd choose to squeeze in an extra workout the next morning instead of turning down a late-night slice of pizza.<\/p>\n
Other people are exactly the opposite; theyd much rather restrict their diets than set foot on a treadmill. Either way, its a common quandary for anyone trying to lose a few pounds: Should I join a gym…or go on a diet? A new study<\/a> reveals that theres no easy answer—and to reap the health benefits of weight loss, you must do both. <\/p>\n Researchers at the University of Missouri tested two groups of overweight, sedentary women head-to-head. One group was given a 12-week membership to Weight Watchers<\/a>, the other to a local fitness club. Their goal was to measure not just overall weight lost during that time, but also body-fat loss, especially dangerous abdominal fat.<\/p>\n Weight Watchers members lost an average of 5% of their body weight, or about nine pounds each, while the number on the scale for the fitness group didn't budge. This confirms previous research that, in the short-term, cutting calories is a better weight management tool than exercise alone.<\/p>\n But much of the weight lost by the Weight Watchers group was lean muscle mass and not fat. (This is one of the first studies to track exactly what kind of weight is typically lost on a Weight Watchers plan.)<\/p>\n “Without adequate exercise, your body tends to get rid of lean tissue before fat,” lead researcher Steve Ball, PhD, an exercise physiologist, tells me. “But lean tissue is associated with higher metabolism, and with less of it, your metabolism could actually slow. So there are pros and cons: Yes, these women lost weight and stuck with the program, but they really may not have made themselves much healthier.” In other words, the fitness group might be bigger weight "losers" over time.<\/p>\n