Doctors design 'food memory' phone app to combat obesity
May 11, 2013
Using a simple smartphone application to photograph one's meals is a useful slimming aid for the overweight, according to an experiment reported on Sunday.
The app, designed by British doctors, aims at promoting "food memory" so that people recall what they have eaten and are encouraged not to snack on high-calorie treats.
The app has three parts:
The researchers recruited 12 overweight or obese men and women and monitored them over four weeks in a small-scale pilot study. The volunteers accessed the app more than five times a day on average, and recorded 2.7 daily "episodes" of eating and drinking.
Over the study period, the participants lost 1.5 kilos (3.3 pounds) on average.
Six lost a kilo (2.2 pounds) or more and four lost between zero and one kilo (2.2 pounds), although the other two gained weight, by 100 and 400 grammes (3.5 ounces and 14 ounces) respectively.
"Raising awareness of eating and weight loss achieved suggest this approach could be fruitful," said University of Liverpool investigator Eric Robinson.
"Given that our trial was a very brief intervention with little contact time and no nutritional advice or support, this is a promising finding."
The work was unveiled at the European Congress on Obesity in Liverpool, northwestern England.
[Image via Agence France-Presse]