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What Is 'The 16:8 Diet' And Can It Actually Help You To Safely Lose Weight?

What Is 'The 16:8 Diet' And Can It Actually Help You To Safely Lose Weight?

Goodbye dinner parties and late-night dates

eating diet
eating diet

Photo: Harper's BAZAAR

eating diet

The 16:8 diet, a type of intermittent fasting, might help with modest weight loss, according to new research.

On the 16:8 diet, you're supposed to fast for 16 hours a day, then eat whatever you want for the remaining eight hours.

Researchers also found that the diet helped lower blood pressure.

Fasting sounds downright miserable, but one new study shows that the 16:8 diet (fasting for 16 hours; eating for eight) might actually be good for you.

Spending 16 hours a day without food? Torture. But most people generally plan their eight hours of eating for between 10 a.m. and 6 p.m. So you’re sleeping for a solid portion of the fast.

For the new study, published in the journal Nutrition and Healthy Aging, 23 obese men and women followed the 16:8 diet for 12 weeks. Researchers compared their results against a control group that ate normally.

Related article: 5 Reasons Why You Should Make Chocolate Your Midday Snack

During the 16-hour fasting period, dieters could only consume water, black tea, coffee, or diet soft drinks. (Again, the participants could eat whatever their hearts desired during the remaining eight hours of the day.)

After 12 weeks, the researchers found that people on the diet lost a modest amount of weight and lowered their blood pressure. The researchers also discovered that study participants ate 350 fewer calories per day compared to the control group.

“These findings suggest that eight-hour, time-restricted feeding produces mild caloric restriction and weight loss, without calorie counting,” said the study authors.

Photo: Getty

Photo: Getty

getty stock obese

This was a really small study, so it's tough to draw any solid conclusions from it. Also, it focused on obese patients, and it’s hard to say if people who are just trying to lose a few pounds will also benefit.

“More research needs to be conducted before we can see if and how it can be implemented into an actual plan effectively,” says Beth Warren, R.D.N., founder of Beth Warren Nutrition and author of Secrets of a Kosher Girl.

Still, other types of intermittent fasting show promise as well.

Related article: 10 Things That Can Happen To Your Body When You Give Up Carbs

Case in point: The 5:2 diet (eat normally five days a week; cut back to 20 percent of your normal daily calorie intake for the other two) showed solid results compared to calorie restriction in a 2017 study in the International Journal of Obesity.

Photo: Getty

Photo: Getty

getty stock scales

So, will you lose weight on the 16:8 diet? In theory, yes. “It can help if someone wants to lose weight because oftentimes overeating at night is a big factor in weight gain,” says Warren. “Fasting will take away that obstacle.”

It’s also likely that fasting can put your body into a state of ketosis (without actually having to do the keto diet), which is when your body starts burning fat for energy instead of carbs, Warren says.

Related article: 11 Deliciously Healthy Cafes In Singapore For All Your Fitness Goals

But keep in mind: This diet (like any diet) might be hard to maintain. Goodbye dinner parties and late-night dates. And god forbid a friend is late to that 5 p.m. dinner you scheduled.

Photo: Getty

Photo: Getty

“It may be sustainable if you stick to the strict regiment,” Warren says. “However, this is difficult to maintain in real-life scenarios like social functions.”

The bottom line: The 16:8 diet may help with weight loss, but more research is needed to draw any solid conclusions.

This article originally appeared on Harper's BAZAAR UK

 

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