Re-air Financial Incentives for Weight Loss with David Roddenberry

David RoddenberryThis weekend on YOUR HEALTH®, we’re re-airing one of our most interesting shows with  David Roddenberry, Co-Founder of HealthyWage, about Financial Incentives for Weight Loss.
 
 
 
Please tune in! This show will air:
WCHL 97.9FM
• Saturday, January 4th at 9am
• Sunday, January 5th at 9am and 5pm
• Monday, January 6th at 6pm and 10pm
KKAG Retro Radio 88.7FM
• Sunday, January 5th at 7am

Listen to the Show!
Download the episode from the Carolina Digital Repository
 

Financial Incentives for Weight Loss with David Roddenberry

David RoddenberryAdam & Cristy wil be joined by Co-Founder of HealthyWageDavid Roddenberry, this weekend on YOUR HEALTH® to talk about Financial Incentives for Weight Loss.
 
 
 
Please tune in to WCHL 97.9FM! This show will air:
• Saturday, June 29th at 9am
• Sunday, June 30th at 9am and 5pm
• Monday, July 1stat 6pm and 10pm
 
Listen to the Show!
Download the episode from the Carolina Digital Repository
 

Alcohol & the Anxious Mind with Dr. Thomas Kash

Thomas KashSpecial guest host, Dr. Bob Gwyther from the UNC Department of Family Medicine, will join Adam again this weekend to talk with Dr. Thomas Kash, Researcher and Assistant Professor in the Department of Pharmacology and the UNC Bowles Center for Alcohol Studies at the UNC School of Medicine, about Alcohol & the Anxious Mind.

 

Please tune in! This show will air:
• Saturday, October 29th at 9am
• Sunday, October 30th at 9am and 5pm
• Monday, October 31st at 6pm and 10pm

 

Listen to the Show! 

 

 

What positive health changes would you make for money? Would it work?

Hand holding cash

A new research study in the Annals of Internal Medicine looks at the provocative question of whether using money as an incentive for weight-loss is effective at helping overweight people lose weight.  The answer may surprise you.

Two groups of people in the study were both given a standard behavioral program, and one group also received an account that they could put up to $3 of their own money each day, matched by $3 from the researchers. If their weight loss goals were met at the end of each month, they got to keep the money, but if they failed to meet their goals, they lost the money.  The study found that after the end of the 6-8 months, those with the financial incentive lost more weight then the people without the financial incentive.

Sounds almost too good to be true?  Well, it is…If we didn’t look any further then the end of the 6-8 month period, we might say this study was successful, and maybe we should pay people not only to lose weight, but to quit smoking, to eat only low cholesterol foods, to take their high blood pressure medication, and so on- but what happens when the money is no longer being paid?

In this study, 9 months after the program ended and no financial incentives remained, the participants gained back most of their weight. In fact, less than about 10% even met their goal of losing a pound per week in the first 24 weeks of the study.

Even though a great deal can be said about the benefits of incentives on people, this study seems to show that a negative incentive also exists. Instead of just having positive outcomes, participants had the chance of losing something too. We don’t like this type of study really- ethically, we want to help our patients lose weight, quit smoking and make healthier lifestyle choices. But, it is about changing lifestyles, and that requires true internal motivation and social support- these items cannot be bought or sold so easily in the medical marketplace.

For good information on losing weight sensibly over the long term: Weight Loss: Choosing a Diet That’s Right for You from Mayo Clinic.

Image courtesy of Pictures of Money