Tag Archives: Lose Weight

Sherri Shepherd: How She Lost Weight And How You Can Too

By Dan Schawbel, Contributor

I spoke to Sherri Shepherd about her new book, Plan D: How to Lose Weight and Beat Diabetes (Even If You Don’t Have It). Sherri is an Emmy Award-winning talk show host, comedienne, and actress. She appears five days a week as the cohost of ABC’s The View. Sherri has starred in several major films, including One for the Money, Think Like a Man, Crash, Precious, Beauty Shop, and Big Momma’s House 3, and appears as a frequent guest star on 30 Rock and Hot in Cleveland. Sherri has also been a contestant on Dancing with the Stars, and she recently launched her own wig line, NOW for Sherri Shepherd. You can follow her on Twitter @SherriEShepherd. …read more

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Forbes Latest

Dubai Offers Flabby Citizens Gold to Lose Weight

By John Johnson

Dubai is, generally speaking, a fat nation. It also happens to be a very rich nation, and those two factors have combined to create an unusual weight-loss offer from the government: It will give people gold based on how many pounds they drop, reports Emirates 24/7 . The month-long initiative got… …read more

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Newser – Great Finds

Get Paid to Lose Weight

By Brian Orelli, The Motley Fool

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A report from the Mayo Clinic at this month’s American College of Cardiology scientific meeting suggest that patients given a financial incentive to lose weight are more likely shed pounds than those that weren’t given the option.

Participants in the study were paid $20 for every month they met their goal of losing four pounds per month up to their predetermined goal weight. Participants who didn’t meet the goal had to pay $20 to a bonus pool for each month they didn’t meet their goal. The bonus pool was then raffled off at the end of the study.

The financial incentive encouraged participants to stick with their weight loss program. 62% of participants offered the financial incentive completed the study compared to 26% in the control group that weren’t offered incentives.

Naturally sticking with it caused patients to lose more weight over the one-year study: 9.08 pounds for those given the incentive, compared with 2.34 pounds for the non-incentive group.

That’s great, but….
I know what you’re thinking: It sounds great, but who’s going to pay people to lose weight? Hopefully the people that would benefit indirectly from the weight loss.

Health insurers usually pass along higher medical costs incurred by obese patients. If 25% of members are obese and they add $2,000 in medical costs, everyone’s premiums have to go up by $500.

There are some employers that self-insure. They’re large enough that they can form their own health insurance pool, paying more for some employees and less for others, but averaging out to less than they’d have to pay for traditional health insurance.

Other employers cover all or some of a traditional health insurance, but the cost they negotiate is someone dependent on the expected medical costs the health insurers calculate they’ll have to pay out. A company with an older work force, for instance, will be quoted higher premiums than a company made up of primarily younger workers who don’t get sick as often.

For employers paying medical bills — either directly or through insurance premiums — there would seem to be a very good incentive to get employees healthier, saving them money in the long run. Healthier employees could also be more productive. To save that money, companies might be willing to shell out some cash to help encourage employees to shed pounds and get healthier.

Provisions in the Obamacare law allow employers to charge employees who have a high body mass index or other negative health indicators like smokers more than their healthy counterparts. That sounds a lot like the $20 that participants in the study had to pay to the bonus pool when they didn’t reach their goal, although the increase could be a lot more than $240 per year.

This is good news for obesity drugmakers
If companies are willing to pay employees to lose weight, it seems reasonable to assume they might also be willing to shell out cash to pay for obesity drugs. What was once …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at DailyFinance