TOPS Club

This article is about the non-profit organization TOPS Club, Inc., a.k.a. TOPS. For other uses of TOPS or Tops, see TOPS (disambiguation).
TOPS Club, Inc.
Founded 1948
Founder Esther S. Manz
Type Weight loss
Location
Area served
Worldwide, but primarily United States and Canada
Members
180,000 members/10,000 chapters
Key people
Barbara Cady, President
Slogan Take Off Pounds Sensibly
Website www.tops.org

TOPS Club, Inc. is a non-profit charitable corporation based in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, USA, having members in chapters located worldwide, the majority of them in the United States and Canada. Its twofold objective is to sponsor research and foster support groups in human body weight control. Most members refer to the organization simply as "TOPS", an acronym for "Take Off Pounds Sensibly."[2]

Weight control philosophy

TOPS originally formed in 1948 as a response to the need to assist overweight and obese people to lose weight by setting up a support group system. Over the years as more weight management problems were identified, TOPS expanded their scope to include all people with weight problems. They also created an incentive for club members who reach and maintain their weight at their goal level to stay in the club as KOPS (Keeps Off Pounds Sensibly) members—giving them extra recognition to help encourage other members in the club.

TOPS does not endorse any particular weight-loss plan (see dieting) and welcomes people into the membership even if they are actively involved in any weight-loss plan. Club meetings emphasize nutrition, exercise, motivation, and wellness education focused on supplementing a member's effort to manage his or her weight. TOPS publishes educational materials for its members as well as a bimonthly membership magazine, TOPS News.

Local chapter meetings

A local chapter of the club is set up in a small region, usually covering one community. Larger communities may have more than one chapter, either because of size limitations or to address the various schedules of their members. According to their web site, the average chapter has 20 members. The total membership as of 2003 is 200,000. Only 4 people are needed to start a meeting in their community.

Members meet weekly both for weight recording ("weigh-in") and for the main session. The weigh-in is performed in a private room with two members present as recording officers. As such, the weight records are considered medically sound.

New members are required to consult with their physician within the first few months of joining to obtain a goal weight for themselves, then report it to the recorders. The membership fee is $32/year in the USA and $36/year in Canada.

The main session in a club meeting is usually one of two types: education or special recognition. In either case, the meeting begins with a report of total losses or gains, in pounds, for the week, as tabulated from the just-completed weight recording. Individual members are recognized for such things as losing the most pounds in one week among all the members. Small prizes are awarded to these "losers" (the word used within the confines of TOPS instead of "winners"). These prizes are funded from the weekly dues (one to two dollars) collected from the members. Special recognition involves more elaborate award ceremonies for "losers" based on several criteria such as most pounds lost in a month or year, best overall improvement, and maintaining goal-weight for a KOPS.

International Recognition Days

The most successful male and female "losers" from each state and province are recognized as Kings and Queens at regional events each spring. They are then invited to attend International Recognition Days, a three-day convention which is held each summer in a different U.S. or Canadian city. A highlight of IRD is the crowning of the International King and Queen and the International King Runner-up and Queen Runner-up. The winners are chosen according to which Kings and Queens lost the most total weight to reach the weight-loss goal set with their personal physician. The International King and Queen are often chosen for losing 200 pounds or more.

IRD is also an opportunity for education and inspiration. TOPS features several health and fitness experts as well as motivational speakers throughout IRD.

Medical research

TOPS Club, Inc. has been actively involved in the clinical study of obesity and metabolic research since 1966, and has contributed more than $8.5 million to the Medical College of Wisconsin in support of these efforts. The TOPS Obesity and Metabolic Research Center at the Medical College of Wisconsin in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, was established in 1994. Its program director is Ahmed Kissebah, M.D., Ph.D., an internationally recognized leader in the study of obesity and metabolic research. Dr. Kissebah is also TOPS' medical advisor and a contributing author for TOPS’ lifestyle guide, The Choice Is Mine, and for articles for the TOPS’ membership magazine, TOPS News.

Work done at the TOPS Obesity and Metabolic Research Center has contributed to milestones of obesity research, including: • The paper entitled “Biology of Regional Body Fat Distribution: Relationship of to non-insulin dependent diabetes mellitus”. Findings in thisstudy led to the terms “apple shaped” vs. “pear shaped”. • Identification of a gene that plays a significant role in determining blood levels of HDL cholesterol, commonly referred to as “good” cholesterol.

More than 500 TOPS families participated as research volunteers in those studies, making them among the largest family studies conducted in the United States. Findings have been published in over 200 of the most reputable scientific papers including The Journal of American Medicine Association, and Nature Genetics.

The journal Obesity publish ed the study "Determining the Effectiveness of Take Off Pounds Sensibly (TOPS), a Nationally Available Nonprofit Weight Loss Program" by Nia S. Mitchell, L. Miriam Dickinson, Allison Kempe and Adam G. Tsai in its March 2011 issue. That study, conducted at the University of Colorado Anschutz Medical Campus, found those who spent three years in TOPS lost five to seven percent of their body weight and kept it off." [3]

TOPS also supports and encourages obesity research through The Obesity Society and the Canadian Obesity Network and partners with many nonprofit and governmental initiatives to combat obesity, including First Lady Michelle Obama's "Let's Move" campaign.

TOPS partners with Dr. Rena Wing, Ph.D., and the Weight Control and Diabetes Research Center affiliated with Brown Medical School, where TOPS members are the subjects in a study of "Successful Weight Losers." TOPS members also participate in the National Weight Loss Registry, which is also sponsored by the Brown Medical School.

TOPS partnered in the "Bias, Discrimination and Obesity" study co-authored by Dr. Rebecca Puhl, Ph.D. and Dr. Kelly Brownell, Ph.D. of Yale University.[4] TOPS meets with healthcare professionals at a variety of national conferences throughout the year (such as The Obesity Society, American Dietetic Association/Food & Nutrition Conference, and the American Association of Diabetes Educators. The organization also established the TOPS Achievement Award for scientists who have made major contributions to the field of obesity research in affiliation with The Obesity Society.

See also

References

  1. Bumbalo, JA; Young, DE (1973). "The self-help phenomenon". The American journal of nursing (The American Journal of Nursing, Vol. 73, No. 9) 73 (9): 1588–91. doi:10.2307/3422630. JSTOR 3422630. PMID 4489849.
  2. Knight, Bob; Wollert, Richard W.; Levy, Leon H.; Frame, Cynthia L.; Padgett, Valerie P. (February 1980). "Self-help groups: The members' perspectives". American Journal of Community Psychology 8 (1): 53–65. doi:10.1007/BF00892281. ISSN 0091-0562. OCLC 1798402. PMID 7369192. Cite uses deprecated parameter |coauthors= (help)
  3. Mitchell, Nia S.; L. Miriam Dickinson, Allison Kempe and Adam G. Tsai (March 2011). "Determining the Effectiveness of Take Off Pounds Sensibly (TOPS), a Nationally Available Nonprofit Weight Loss Program". Obesity 19 (3): 568–573. doi:10.1038/oby.2010.202. PMID 20864948. Retrieved 10 August 2011. Cite uses deprecated parameter |coauthors= (help)
  4. Puhl, Rebecca; Kelly D. Brownell (2001). "Bias, Discrimination, and Obesity". Obesity 9 (12): 788–805. doi:10.1038/oby.2001.108. PMID 11743063. Retrieved 10 August 2011.

External links

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