Showing posts with label obesity. Show all posts
Showing posts with label obesity. Show all posts

Tuesday, January 1, 2013

Want to keep your resolution this year? Get a plan.



Happy 2013!  With the New Year upon us, many of us choose to make resolutions of one form or another. According to Reuters, 87% of Americans will make resolutions for 2013.  Often, resolutions focus on improving some aspect of our health, our relationships, or our finances. Some examples: "This year, I am finally going to lose weight;" "I resolve to be more patient with my children;" "I will stop spending so much."

Despite our good intentions, the vast majority of us will not meet our resolutions. According to some research, fewer than 1 in 10 of us will succeed over time. 

Why are we so bad at keeping our resolutions? After all, we really want to lose weight, be less stressed, or whatever else we have promised ourselves.  In a nutshell, it's because we don't have a real plan.  Many of us fail to define what we really want to accomplish in clear, measurable terms.  On top of this, most of us don't know how we will get there.  We haven't thought about how we will deal with challenges or barriers to meeting our goals, or on the other hand, how we can reorganize things in our lives to make it easier to keep our resolutions.

Fear not: help is available. One of the best sources for clear, concise guidance is a book written by my colleagues, Sheri Pruitt and Josh Klapow. Living SMART: Five Essential Skills to Change Your Health Habits Forever is focused on health behavior like losing weight, or stopping smoking. But its core recommendations can be applied to any type of resolution that involves changing what you do on a daily basis.  

Living SMART uses the acronym S-M-A-R-T to describe the skills needed for success. I have taken the liberty of summarizing each of the skills below.

Setting a goal involves translating a general health goal to a target behavior.  For example, “I need to relax” could be translated into “I will practice relaxation exercises for 10 minutes, three times per day, and five days per week.”  One key aspect of goal setting, according to this approach, is to start with a target that is small and achievable, and then build slowly on success.
Monitoring progress is perhaps the most overlooked component of success. Self-monitoring, using a simple chart, can be used to track virtually anything you do, including exercising, eating, spending money, etc. Research has shown that self-monitoring has an impact, in and of itself, on the target action.  Watching progress visually on a chart becomes a type of reward in itself.
Arranging the environment for success means modifying the home or work environment to encourage new habits that you want to cultivate, and/or to discourage old habits that you want to decrease or eliminate altogether. For example, if you want to stop drinking sodas, remove these drinks from the home refrigerator and storage pantries. Or alternatively, if you want to walk more frequently, place walking shoes at the front door as a reminder. The possibilities for arranging the environment are almost endless and require simply thinking about ways in which your desired actions can be prompted while undesired actions can be made more difficult.
Recruiting a support team involves seeking the positive influence of family, friends, and others to help meet your goals. Identify buddies or peers, meaning people who who want to achieve similar goals, to provide camaraderie along the way. Supporters, meaning people who are not necessarily making changes themselves but who agree to support your efforts, also can be helpful.
Treating oneself involves setting rewards for meeting your desired goals. Rewards should be decided in advance, and should occur frequently at the beginning. They don’t need to be large or expensive -  bubble baths or watching a favorite show are examples of small treats that can be used. Over time, feelings of accomplishment and satisfaction often become rewarding in themselves.

This is a quick summary only.  Sheri and Josh's book goes into much greater detail about each of these skills and how to apply them.  I encourage you to read it in order to learn more about these concepts. 

The research is clear: if you want to keep your resolution, you need a real plan. Your plan must define your target behavior in clear terms, include how you will change your surroundings to encourage your resolution, involve the support of others, allow you to self-monitor your progress, and reward your actions along the way.
  

Saturday, November 24, 2012

Sleep: the often-forgotten health booster


In the course of my career, I have encountered many people who have an impeccably-healthy diet and who exercise daily, yet at the same time routinely deprive themselves of a complete night's sleep.  In fact, it is not uncommon to hear colleagues bragging about how little sleep they have obtained in the past week due to a pressing work deadline or other seemingly-important priority.  And, in our modern world it is literally possible for people to work through the night, night after night.

In our culture, many people believe that acknowledging any sort of natural limitation, such as needing eight hours of sleep per night, is a sign of weakness. Making the general statement that humans have these kinds of inherent limitations, or even worse, admitting that you have these limitations, is sacrilege in certain business and social circles.  "When the going gets tough, the tough get going," or so the saying goes.  In other words, you must be prepared to sleep less and work harder on demand.  But for many people, "on demand" never ends.

The irony of this situation is that when people attempt to defy their natural limits by working longer and harder, they deprive themselves of exactly what they need to think clearly and perform well.  They end up working longer, but not smarter.  As a result, their performance frequently suffers.  Common effects are poor concentration, depressed mood, and decreased ability to perform automatic, skill-based tasks. 

Sleep deprivation also has many negative health effects.  Hormonal and metabolic functioning is disrupted, leading to obesity, high blood pressure, heart problems, and diabetes.  Total sleep deprivation is almost always fatal, and people who sleep less than 6 hours per night die at younger ages than those who sleep 6 to 8 hours per night. 

People vary in how much sleep they need.  According to the National Sleep Foundation, adults typically need somewhere between 7 and 9 hours of sleep per night.  Nevertheless, it's important to pay attention to your own individual needs by assessing how you feel on different amounts of sleep.

There is no way to sugar coat the following fact: devoting more time to sleep results in less time for other activities.  But the clear advantage to making this change is that, with adequate sleep, you can expect to be more efficient and productive during the time that you are awake.  You will be able to accomplish more in less time, and make fewer mistakes.

Convinced? Future blog posts will provide research-based tips for getting a good night's sleep.

Additional resources on sleep: