Starting a low-calorie diet to lose weight and feel better? You might want to think twice. A massive new study tracking nearly 30,000 Americans has uncovered a startling conclusion: the people following calorie-restricted diets —the foundation of practically every weight loss plan — scored higher on depression screenings than those who weren’t dieting at all.
The research, published in BMJ Nutrition, Prevention & Health, analyzed six years of national health data and found that men and overweight individuals took the biggest mental health hit from restrictive eating. While we’ve been told for decades that losing weight improves mood, this study reveals a darker side to diet culture that’s been hiding in plain sight.
When Cutting Calories Cuts Into Your Mental Health
Researchers from the University of Toronto examined data from 28,525 adults who participated in the U.S. National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey between 2007 and 2018. They divided participants into four groups: those not following any diet, people on calorie-restricted plans, those on nutrient-restricted diets (like low-fat or low-carb), and individuals following established dietary patterns such as diabetic or DASH plans. Depression levels were measured using the Patient Health Questionnaire-9, where scores of 10 or higher indicate serious mood problems.
Among the study participants, about 8% followed calorie-restricted diets while roughly 3% stuck to nutrient-restricted plans. The results were eye-opening: calorie-restricted dieters scored an average of 0.29 points higher on depression scales compared to non-dieters. For overweight participants, the mental health impact was even more severe. Their depression scores jumped by 0.46 points when following calorie-restricted diets and 0.61 points when following nutrient-restricted diets.
Men faced particularly harsh consequences. Those following nutrient-restrictive diets showed higher cognitive-affective symptoms (problems with thoughts and feelings), while all three types of restrictive diets were linked to higher somatic symptoms in men. This included physical manifestations of depression like fatigue, sleep problems, and appetite changes.
The Laboratory vs. Real Life Problem
Previous studies showing that low-calorie diets improve mood came from carefully controlled research environments where participants received professionally designed meal plans with balanced nutrition. But real-world dieting looks nothing like these laboratory conditions.
“This discrepancy may arise because prior studies were primarily randomised controlled trials (RCTs) where participants adhered to carefully designed diets ensuring balanced nutrient intake. In contrast, real-life calorie-restricted diets and obesity often result in nutritional deficiencies (particularly in protein, essential vitamins/minerals) and induce physiological stress, which can exacerbate depressive symptomatology including cognitive-affective symptoms,” the researchers explain.
When people cut calories on their own, they frequently become malnourished and stressed, creating perfect conditions for mental health problems. Men appear especially vulnerable because they have greater nutritional needs to begin with. “Diets low in carbohydrates (glucose) or fats (omega-3s) may theoretically worsen brain function and exacerbate cognitive-affective symptoms, especially in men with greater nutritional needs,” the researchers note.
Why Overweight Dieters Struggle Most
The study found that overweight participants faced unique challenges with restrictive eating. While successful weight loss typically improves mood, many real-world dieters struggle with sticking to their plans, experience weight cycling (losing weight and then putting it back on), or fail to lose significant weight — all while dealing with the stress of constant restriction.
Rather than the promised mood boost from weight loss, many people end up trapped in a cycle where attempting to improve their health actually undermines their mental well-being. Interestingly, people following established dietary patterns like diabetic diets showed less consistent patterns, though those with obesity following such diets still had higher depression scores than healthy-weight individuals not dieting.
Rethinking Our Approach to Health
The results arrive as social media floods us with transformation photos and celebrity diet endorsements promising quick fixes. But this research reveals that our obsession with weight loss through calorie restriction might be missing something important: mental health.
“This study adds to the emerging evidence linking dietary patterns and mental health, raising important questions about whether restrictive diets which are low in nutrients considered beneficial for cognitive health, such as omega-3 fatty acids and vitamin B12, may precipitate depressive symptoms,” says Professor Sumantra Ray, Chief Scientist and Executive Director of the NNEdPro Global Institute for Food, Nutrition and Health, in a statement.
Source: https://studyfinds.org/diet-trap-low-calorie-weight-loss-plan-depression/