The holidays are a time when family friends and co-workers gather to enjoy each other’s company – and eat! Everywhere we turn there are indulgent meals, cookie exchanges, holiday parties and family gatherings that encourage overeating, sedentary behavior and the consumption of calorie-rich foods.
It’s no surprise that maintaining a healthy weight is a challenge during the holiday season! Holiday weight gain is a common concern for many adults. In fact, it is one of the biggest contributors to our total annual weight gain. If we gain an average of 1 pound each year and can’t lose it, it all adds up!
Study suggests you can control holiday weight gain
Is it inevitable? Are we destined to see a bigger number when we step on the scale in January?
A study published in The BMJ sought to find out. Researchers examined the effectiveness of a brief (four to eight week) behavioral intervention to prevent weight gain over the Christmas holiday period. The researchers randomized two hundred and seventy-two adults into one of two groups. The intervention group was given a behavioral intervention intended to increase their restraint of food and beverage consumption. The intervention involved three components: encouraging participants to regularly weigh themselves and record their weight; providing specific weight-management strategies; and providing information on how much physical activity would be needed to burn off the calories consumed in typical holiday foods and drinks. The control group received information on healthy living.
Results showed that the intervention group lost an average of 0.3 pounds, while the control group gained 0.8 pounds. This may not seem like much, but research shows that weight gains are not fully lost in the months following the holidays. Although the yearly gain is small, it can add up to an increase of 10 pounds over 10 years!
How much activity would it take to burn off this eggnog?
If you want to lose or maintain your weight during the holidays, it can be helpful to know the rough number of calories in your favorite indulgences and, in turn, how to tweak your gym sessions to balance things out. Calories aren’t the only important nutritional factor in a food, but they do matter.
Understanding how much physical activity it would take to burn off calories, and possibly considering that information when making choices about what to eat, also played a role in preventing weight gain. In the study, the researchers provided the intervention group with a chart that showed the approximate amount of activity it would take to burn the calories found in a given number of festive foods. For example, you would need to spend about forty minutes walking to burn all the calories in plain eggnog; one hour for spiked. It would take approximately eight minutes of walking or four minutes of running to burn off the calories in five tablespoons of gravy.
Here are a few strategies to help you keep your weight in check with- out foregoing your holiday traditions.
Let’s end this article with an important reminder. There’s no need to feel guilty about eating holiday foods. Food is meant to be enjoyed, especially this time of year!
Preventing weight gain over the holidays can be a challenge, but it is possible! You just need to have a plan, stay focused and keep moving.
Keep your eating to the holiday, not to the holiday season. Wishing you peace, joy, and good health always. Good luck to you.