Snack diet doesn't help weight loss
AAP
Relevant offers
Eating smaller meals more often does not help overweight people shed their kilos any faster.
Dieticians have tested the commonly-held theory that splitting daily food intake into five or six snack-type meals speeds up fat-burning.
In a study of 179 obese Australians, they found no weight-loss advantage from following such a diet.
"There seems to be little benefit to changing how often or how regularly you eat if you're trying to lose weight," said lead researcher Michelle Palmer, a dietician at the University of Newcastle.
"We found it's not when you eat that matters, but what and how much you eat."
The study involved 179 obese men and women who were all on the same healthy, weight-loss diet and with the same kilojoule intake, but with differing eating patterns.
One group ate three times a day, while the other added in three extra snacks to try to keep metabolism boosted throughout the day and speed up fat-burning.
But results showed no difference in changes in weight, waist measurement, body fatness or blood sugar levels between the groups.
Ms Palmer will tell the national dieticians conference on the Gold Coast this week that the findings should end debate on the advantages of snacking and focus Australians back on keeping dieting simple.
"Many people find it hard enough to stick to a healthy eating plan to lose weight, let alone worrying about any suggested benefits of snacking or not snacking," she said.
Dr Tim Crowe, a nutrition specialist at Deakin University in Melbourne, said the research dispelled a "faddish dieting trend".
"It's popular advice yet there's been very little research to show it actually helps with weight loss," Dr Crowe said.
"It's rubbish. In fact, there's some research to suggest playing around with when you eat may actually cause you to put weight on."
He said dieters should be discouraged from making drastic changes to their eating patterns, but do what works for them.
"It's best if they focus on how much they're eating and of course what they're eating," Dr Crowe said.
"Six small days at McDonald's clearly isn't going to help you lose weight."
The last national nutrition survey found 56 per cent of adults eat between twice to four times a day, while 37 per cent eat five to seven times daily.
Sponsored links
Popcorn and soda can equal three burgers
Martinborough pinot strikes gold
Sperm decline spurs research into face cream
Nice Kiwi blokes - shame about the women
Yves Saint Laurent auction fetches $18m
Twins just the wicket to give Harris hat-trick
Women pay top dollar for evening with bachelor
Gene test promises perfect partner
Women wear 500 chemicals daily
Bullying at school scars adulthood
Bitter MP seeks reconciliation
Police dob in drink driver to Air NZ
Lawyer backs down over drink-drive website
All Blacks beat England in dour test
Triple treat cashes up ailing NZRU
All Whites squad to divvy up $4m
Williams confident of luring Tiger to NZ again
Sleepwalker found not guilty of wife's death
World Cup party's over for Phoenix
Oprah says ending show 'feels right'
Police officer killed as floods devastate UK
Miley Cyrus tour bus overturns, one dead