Summary: In young adults with overweight or obesity in Dhaka, an 8-week calorie-restriction diet built on familiar South Asian food patterns produced a significant 2.47 kg weight loss and roughly one-unit BMI reduction, while an untreated control group did not improve.
PICO Summary
| Element | Detail |
|---|---|
| Population | 120 young adults aged 18–35 with overweight or obesity in Dhaka, Bangladesh. |
| Intervention | Calorie-restriction diet using local South Asian food patterns for 8 weeks, with motivational support and meal planning (n=58). |
| Comparison | Ad libitum diet without dietary counselling (n=60). |
| Outcome | CR group lost 2.47 kg (95% CI 1.94–3.01; p<0.001), BMI 26.68 to 25.65; control gained 0.31 kg (p=0.142). No adverse effects. No body-composition or metabolic endpoints. |
South Asian calorie-restriction diet
RCT · overweight young adults · 8 weeks
A culturally tailored calorie-restriction diet built on South Asian foods produced a modest, safe 2.47 kg weight loss over 8 weeks, while an untreated control group did not improve.
Expert Commentary
The principle being tested here is one I already hold firmly, that weight loss follows the energy deficit rather than any magic macronutrient mix, and that adherence is everything. What makes this trial worth noting is not novelty but context: building the calorie deficit around rice and lentils rather than imposing an alien Western meal plan is exactly the kind of cultural tailoring that, in my experience, decides whether dietary advice survives contact with real life. The roughly 2.5 kg loss over eight weeks is modest but at a safe, believable rate, and it matters more given South Asians’ higher cardiometabolic risk at lower BMI. My caveats are routine: eight weeks says nothing about maintenance, the control group got no attention so some effect is non-specific, and only weight and BMI were measured. Can I use this with my patients? Yes, very directly, as a reminder to anchor dietary counselling in a patient’s own food culture rather than a generic plan, paired with activity and real follow-up. I would treat it as a sound first behavioural step, not a standalone obesity solution.
References
Obidul Huq AK, Biswas JP, Farshi US, Batul U, Mim JS, Jahan NA. Effectiveness of south Asian food pattern in calorie restriction diet among young adults with overweight and obesity in Dhaka city: a randomized controlled trial. J Health Popul Nutr. 2025;44(1):332. doi:10.1186/s41043-025-01065-0
