Atkins Diet - Compared
Many Ways to Lose Weight
There’s no end to the number of weight loss approaches,
and as the problem of overweight and obesity grows, so does the
array of solutions. In February 2000, the USDA began looking at
the claims made by some of the popular diets, and in January
2001, the USDA met to develop research standards to study the
effects of these popular approaches. The diets that involve food
instead of pills, formulas, and non-food supplements fall into
three categories: high-fat, low carbohydrate; moderate fat with
balanced nutrient reduction; and low to very low fat
diets.
When
weight reduction diets have been looked at objectively, it has
been shown that it really doesn’t matter what balance of
nutrients are, as long as the calories are reduced, weight loss
occurs. The Personal Diet is a moderately low fat diet with a
balance of nutrients is that this is the diet that has been shown
to help people maintain the weight lost over time.
Why not learn to eat the way you need to eat to maintain a
healthy body weight while you lose? In addition, it has other
health benefits. Because your diet focuses upon replacing
saturated fats with monounsaturated fat, eating low amounts of
high fat animal foods, and increasing the nutritional quality of
the foods you eat, it is a diet that is made for good heart
health, and reducing risk of certain cancers and
diabetes.
Here
is an overview of some of the popular diets, the pros and cons,
who should avoid them and some of the pitfalls of each
approach.
Popular
Diets-Pros and Cons
Diet
|
Basic Approach
|
Pros
|
Cons
|
People who should avoid this
|
Pitfalls
|
|
Atkins Diet
|
High protein, Low carbohydrate, High Fat
|
For
short term weight loss, there is a reduced feeling of
hunger
|
High in fat, low in important vitamins and minerals found in
carbohydrate foods, may be potential long term health problems
due to high fat foods
|
Those with heart problems, at risk for heart disease, kidney
problems or diabetes, pregnant, women
athletes
|
Cutting carbohydrates is just a trick to help people reduce
food intake, there is no scientific basis for it in the long
run
|
|
Zone Diet
|
Proteins, carbohydrates, and fats must be eaten in a precise
ratio, and meals and snacks are eaten at precise times
|
High in fruits and vegetables, balance of nutrients is better
than other high protein diets
|
Difficult rules to follow for eating - not practical, hard to
follow eating formula
|
Those with kidney problems, pregnant women,
children
|
Takes concentration on food all day long. Will you lose your
patience before you lose weight?
|
|
Sugar Busters
|
No
sugar, No refined carbohydrates
|
Promotes eating whole grains
|
Too
high in protein and fat. Glycemic index is used to condemn
certain foods like potatoes and other vegetables, and white
flour.
|
People with diabetes
|
Restricts an entire category of food (carbohydrates), this is
not the real way to eat!
|
|
Ornish Diet
|
High carbohydrate, extremely low in fat
|
High in fiber, vitamins and minerals, good for heart
health
|
Very low in fat, no meat - may not appeal to many people
because a very low fat diet loses it’s appeal and
taste
|
Pregnant women due to iron availability, people who
don’t cook at home most of the time, those who don’t
have a lot of time to prepare food
|
While this may be a healthy diet, it can be very difficult to
follow long term. Can you live with this diet?
|
Some of you may know people who are on
these diets, or perhaps you have tried one (or more) of these
approaches. While they all have benefits and drawbacks, unless
the diet plan is something you can adapt your lifestyle to and
develop new eating habits you can stick with over time, the
weight you lose will come back. The key is to follow a plan you
can live with, and one that makes sense nutritionally, not just
for losing weight.
FREE
Diet Analysis!

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