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What Your Doctor May Not Te…

Why Diets Make Us Fat: The Unintended Consequences of Our Obsession With Weight Loss

Author Aamodt, Sandra
Publisher Current
Category Health & Fitness
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Book Details
PublisherCurrent
ISBN / ASIN1591847699
ISBN-139781591847694
AvailabilityIn Stock.
Sales Rank78,274
MarketplaceUnited States 🇺🇸

Description

If diets worked, we'd all be thin by now. Instead, we have enlisted hundreds of millions of people into a war we can't win."

What s the secret to losing weight? If you re like most of us, you ve tried cutting calories, sipping weird smoothies, avoiding fats, and swapping out sugar for Splenda. The real secret is that all of those things are likely to make you weigh more in a few years, not less.

In fact, a good predictor of who will gain weight is who says they plan to lose some. Last year, 108 million Americans went on diets, to the applause of doctors, family, and friends. But long-term studies of dieters consistently find that they re more likely to end up gaining weight in the next two to fifteen years than people who don t diet.

Neuroscientist Sandra Aamodt spent three decades in her own punishing cycle of starving and regaining before turning her scientific eye to the research on weight and health. What she found defies the conventional wisdom about dieting:

Telling children that they re overweight makes them more likely to gain weight over the next few years. Weight shaming has the same effect on adults.
The calories you absorb from a slice of pizza depend on your genes and on your gut bac teria. So does the number of calories you re burning right now.
Most people who lose a lot of weight suffer from obsessive thoughts, binge eating, depres sion, and anxiety. They also burn less energy and find eating much more rewarding than it was before they lost weight.
Fighting against your body s set point a cen tral tenet of most diet plans is exhausting, psychologically damaging, and ultimately counterproductive.

If dieting makes us fat, what should we do instead to stay healthy and reduce the risks of diabetes, heart disease, and other obesity-related conditions? With clarity and candor, Aamodt makes a spirited case for abandoning diets in favor of behav iors that will truly improve and extend our lives.

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