This cross‐sectional survey study examined weight control practices of 2,092 male and 1,748 female freshman students aged 18 years. For women, the desire for weight loss was observed at all levels of body weight. Most women (79%) wished to weigh less than their current weight, and 23% were following a restricted‐calorie diet. In contrast, more men wished to gain (46%) rather than lose weight (32%), and only 3% were dieting at the time of the study. A comparison of weight control practices of men and women who wished to lose weight showed that women restricted calories far more frequently than did men. In contrast, although men were more likely to use exercise for weight control than were women, the differences between the sexes were small. A combined analysis of dieting and exercise behaviors showed that while men relied almost exclusively on intensive exercise as opposed to dieting, women employed exercise as well as dieting for the purpose of weight control. 1994 North American Association for the Study of Obesity (NAASO)
CITATION STYLE
Drewnowski, A., Kurth, C. L., & Krahn, D. D. (1994). Weight‐Loss Strategies of Young Adults: Exercise Versus Dieting. Obesity Research, 2(6), 557–562. https://doi.org/10.1002/j.1550-8528.1994.tb00105.x
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