I was following an article on the Omnivore, which contained this observation:
"Because they can obtain little solace from the results of clinical trials, opponents of low carbohydrate diets are fond of citing the National Weight Control Registry, which was set up by Brown University researchers to record individuals who had successfully lost 30lbs or more, and successfully maintained that weight loss for 1 year or more. According to these researchers, low carbohydrate dieters are poorly represented on the Registry's database. A number of commentators have suggested, in all seriousness, that this under-representation is proof that low carbohydrate diets are incapable of successfully inducing long-term weight loss.
If the main goal of embarking on a weight loss diet was to increase one's willingness to register for national databases, then the National Weight Control Registry would certainly be of relevance. However, as a measure of the relative fat-loss efficacy of low and high carbohydrate diets, the Registry is about as scientifically valid as tarot card reading. There could be countless reasons why the names of low carbohydrate dieters appear infrequently on the Registry; to attempt to guess what these reasons might be would be just that - speculative conjecture. To cite the National Weight Control Registry, and ignore the data from randomized clinical trials that directly compare the effects of low and high carbohydrate diets reveals, not only a contemptuous disregard for the scientific method, but a new level of desperation by anti-low carbohydrate proponents as they attempt to discredit an eating pattern that directly challenges the validity of their closely-held low fat, high carbohydrate dogma."
Well, if we aren't represented here, we should be! Anyone who has kept their weight off for a year can register, and tell their story.
http://www.lifespan.org/services/bm...r/NWCR_join.htm
At the end of the year, I'm signing up! How about you?