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  Vol. 4 No. 2, February 1995 TABLE OF CONTENTS
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Factors That Facilitate Compliance to Lower Fat Intake

Neal D. Barnard, MD; Aysha Akhtar; Andrew Nicholson, MD

Arch Fam Med. 1995;4(2):153-158.


Abstract

The success of dietary interventions that are prescribed to reduce the risk of heart disease depends on the degree to which patients actually change their diets. A review of research trials using different diets and various means of fostering dietary change to reduce cardiac risk factors identified specific factors that are associated with a greater degree of dietary change. Contrary to the common conception that strict diets are unacceptable to patients, those research studies that set stricter limits on fat intake achieved a greater degree of dietary change than did studies with more modest goals. Additional factors used by studies that achieved a lower fat intake include monitoring dietary intake at least monthly, family involvement, group support, provision of food, initial residential treatment, the use of vegetarian diets, and symptomatic subjects. These factors may be useful to researchers and to clinicians seeking to improve dietary compliance in patients.



Author Affiliations

From the Physicians Committee for Responsible Medicine, Washington, DC. Dr Barnard is now with the Department of Psychiatry, George Washington University Medical Center, Washington, DC, and Dr Nicholson is now with the Department of Emergency Medicine, Doctors Community Hospital, Lanham, Md.



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