Gender differences in adherence and retention in Mediterranean diet interventions with a weight‐loss outcome: A systematic review and meta‐analysis

Author:

Rose Laekin1,Wood Amelia1,Gill Timothy2ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Nutrition and Dietetics, School of Nursing and Midwifery, Faculty of Medicine and Health University of Sydney Camperdown Australia

2. Charles Perkins Centre, D17 University of Sydney Camperdown Australia

Abstract

SummaryBackgroundThe Mediterranean diet has been shown to be effective in improving health outcomes and for weight loss. Adherence and retention in dietary interventions are critical to ensure the benefits of the exposure. No studies to date have assessed the role of gender in understanding participants who remain engaged and adhere to Mediterranean diet interventions.AimsThis study aimed to explore gender differences in recruitment, adherence, and retention for Mediterranean diet interventions and whether these were associated with differences in weight‐loss outcomes.MethodsA systematic search was completed in EMBASE, Medline, Cochrane, and clinicaltrials.gov from inception to March 2023. A meta‐analysis of studies reporting retention by gender was completed using odds ratios comparing female to male dropout numbers. A second meta‐analysis was completed for adherence comparing standardized mean difference of Mediterranean diet scores stratified by gender. Newcastle Ottawa score was used to assess risk of bias.ResultsA total of 70 articles were included in the systematic review with six articles included in the adherence meta‐analysis and nine in the dropout meta‐analysis. No statistically significant difference was shown for adherence or retention by gender. Weight‐loss outcomes were inconsistent.ConclusionsThe results of the study suggest a higher adherence and lower dropout for women although these results were not statistically significant. Future studies of Mediterranean diet interventions should include adherence, retention, and weight‐loss data stratified by gender to allow further investigation of this relationship.

Publisher

Wiley

Reference132 articles.

1. Organisation TWH.Obesity and Overweight. Accessed 20 March 2023.https://www.who.int/en/news-room/fact-sheets/detail/obesity-and-overweight

2. Federation WO.Word Obesity Atlas.2023.https://data.worldobesity.org/publications/?cat=19

3. Population-Based Prevention of Obesity

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