Weight loss and diet guide

The Atkins Diet-A Comprehensive Analysis

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The Atkins Diet

The Atkins Diet goes against much of the established advice of the previously held ideals in the health community in its acceptance of high fat and meat intake. Recent studies seem to show that followers lose weight at a greater rate than more traditional plans without serious effects on health. However, most people may have a very difficult time with Atkins restrictions, since they must fundamentally change the way they eat on a long-term basis, eliminating potatoes, pasta and sweets from their diets on a permanent basis.

Atkins Analysis

Weight Loss Program

Evaluating Current Weight Loss Methods

Read the following pages/chapters in your text, Dieting For Dummies this week. Chapter 17-20, pages 201-247

Summary
In Part six youll get the low-down on the most popular diet books, weight loss medications, weight loss supplements and group programs available. Youll learn which methods are helpful, effective, and safe strategies and which you should abandon. Youll also learn how to determine what a safe and successful weight loss program is on your own, so youll never spend another penny on weight loss fads and scams again.

Topic Outline for Part Six.

Diet Books and Fad Diets

Group Weight Loss Programs

How to Evaluate Diet Plans

Prescription Diet Medications

Herbal and Non-Prescription Weight Loss Preparations


Introduction

Obesity is a chronic condition. Too often, we view it as a temporary problem that we can treat for a few months with a strenuous diet. However, as most successful weight-losers and health professionals know, weight control is a life-long effort. To be safe and effective, any weight-loss program or diet must address the long-term approach, or else the program is largely a waste of money and effort.

Obesity affects about one in four adult Americans, and each year more than half of Americans go on a weight-loss diet or try to maintain their weight. Many people have difficulty in losing just a few pounds, and few succeed in keeping the pounds off permanently. This difficulty losing weight and keeping it off leads many people to turn to a book, medications, or a professional or commercial weight-loss program for help. These avenues are quite popular and are widely advertised in newspapers and on television. However, many of these books and programs fail to demonstrate that they will help you.

lose weight,

and keep it off,

and do it safely.

Lets explore some of todays most popular weight loss methods. Although I could easily write an entire article on each of the programs and methods below, well cover each one briefly since so many exist. But, if you want more in-depth information on these programs, books, or medications, be sure to read the For Further Reading articles.

The Latest Popular Diet Books and Fads

Low Carbohydrate/High Protein Plans

Low carbohydrate diet plans that were all the rage in the 70s have resurfaced. However, just like the 70s fashions, some things should be left behind, never to re-emerge. The following diets below vary in the content and type of carbohydrate they restrict, but the restriction of carbohydrate and/or addition of more protein is generally the basis behind all of these diets.

Many of these plans tout irrational theories and fears about the hormone insulin. Insulin, they say, is increased when carbohydrate is eaten, and insulins role is to store fat. They make the unfounded connection that if you eat carbohydrates, your body stores fat. As an example to this irrational, unfounded theory, Japan has some of the lowest obesity rates in the world. In Japan the diet is overwhelming high in carbohydrates such as rice, grains and vegetables. The bottom line is that insulin does not store any calories as fat if you burn off more calories than you eat in a day. The source of the calories you eat, whether protein, carbohydrate, or fat, does not matter when it comes to weight loss. If, however, you eat more calories than your body burns off, then insulin does play a role in transporting those calories to your fat cells.

Study after study shows that calories, not the composition of carbohydrates, protein, or fat in your diet, are what matters when it comes to weight gain. Furthermore, many of the authors below, including Dr. Atkins and Barry Sears, have never published a single controlled study to substantiate the claims they make in their books. They will often cite testimonials with their clients success, but this is not credible research or evidence. Credible research is conducted by an independent organization not by the person who has a vested interest in the outcome of the research and is published in a reputable medical journal. Prior to being published, the research is peer-reviewed for reliability, accuracy and potential flaws by other physicians and scientists. Client testimonials cited by the authors are not valid research.

You will usually lose weight on these diets, but thats typically because you significantly restrict calories when you take away carbohydrates. Think about all the foods you can no longer eat when you restrict carbohydrate. Its essentially a caloric restriction, not a magic weight loss diet. More importantly, very few people are able to maintain their weight loss with these plans as they eventually become too difficult to follow permanently. Low carb diets have been around for decades, yet there are no published studies that document their long-term success at keeping weight off. If they were successful in the long-term, the re-release of these books and programs wouldnt even be necessary, and we would not see continued skyrocketing obesity rates despite millions of low-carb diet plan book sales.

Many of the authors go on to claim that low-fat, high-carbohydrate diets are the reason for emerging obesity rates in America. But, the authors fail to provide this data from the National Center for Health Statistics.

Fat intake has barely budged from 81.4 grams a day to only 82 grams per day. It has not decreased.

We eat on average 100 to 300 more calories a day over the years.

We exercise less.

Basically, caloric intake has increased and physical activity has decreased. That is the bottom line behind soaring obesity rates.

A final argument against these diets is that many call for significant restrictions in foods we know to be healthy such as fruits, starchy vegetables, and whole grains. Study after study shows that plant foods, such as whole grains, fruits and vegetables contain hundreds, if not thousands of components that may help to prevent numerous diseases. In fact, one of the best ways to reduce cancer risk is by consuming a minimum of 5 fruit and vegetable servings daily -- virtually impossible on a very low carbohydrate plan. Eliminating these foods might increase your chances of many chronic diseases down the road. By contrast, little to no studies tout the benefits of extra saturated fat in the diet, or the health benefits of high intake of meats and proteins. Scientifically and health-wise, these diets make no sense.

The Most Popular Low Carbohydrate/High Protein Plans

Dr. Atkins New Diet Revolution - This diet, as well as Protein Power, calls for the most significant carbohydrate restriction of the diets listed here. Eliminating or significantly reducing so many foods - fruits, grains, sweets, starches, cereals, pasta, sodas, snacks, pancakes, pies, cakes, cookies, breads, flours, potatoes, etc. - is the real key behind the weight loss. Can you eliminate or severely restrict all these foods forever In the real world

Protein Power - Similar to the Atkins diet, this diet relies on the process of ketosis to help you shed pounds. Ketosis happens when you dont eat enough carbohydrates, which are your bodys primary fuel source. First, your body first burns its carbohydrate stores, then the protein in its lean muscle tissue for energy. This process causes the release a lot of stored water weight. In the first weeks of these diets, the pounds drop off - but it is due to the excretion of all this water, not fat. Remember too, that your goal is to maintain as much muscle mass as you can to keep your metabolic rate elevated - you dont want your body burning your muscle for energy, which happens in ketosis. Eventually, your body also starts burning some fat, but not as well as exercise or slight caloric restriction does. And weight loss stops when you add more carbohydrate back to your diet. So, if you ever plan to eat normally again and if youre human, you will want to, count on the lost weight returning note. weight gain after re-adding carbohydrates is due to water storage, not FAT gain.

The Carbohydrate Addicts Lifespan Program - The authors believe that you can eliminate carbohydrate cravings by limiting the amount of carbohydrate you eat and only eating carbohydrate at certain meals. Thats like telling an alcoholic to only drink at certain times of the day as the answer to his addiction. We already learned about our brains biochemistry. To deal with carbohydrate cravings, you probably have more to deal with the things that lead to cravings in the first place. Stress reduction, dealing with emotions, and exercise can raise those serotonin and endorphin levels and combat cravings. Manipulating the foods you eat might help, but its not the full answer for eliminating cravings, and certainly eating carbohydrates only at one meal is not the answer as this plan recommends. You need to begin at square one.

Sugar Busters. - This book asserts that any food that leads to insulin surges causes insulin to store those calories as fat. This diet limits sugars and some starchy carbohydrates due to this mistaken theory. Again, nothing gets stored as fat unless you eat more calories than your body burns. While its a good idea to limit sugars and foods that provide few good nutrients, this book irresponsibly assigns too much blame on insulin as the cause of obesity. Also, most foods are eaten in combination, not by themselves, which significantly alters insulins response. For example, eating a plain baked potato will have a significantly different glycemic response than having a baked potato with sour cream or even a baked potato with steak at the same meal.

The Zone - The author claims that by following a diet composed of exactly 30pct. protein, 30pct. fat and 40pct. carbohydrate at each meal or snack, you will be put into a fat burning zone. No studies support this claim nor has Dr. Sears ever published a diet-related study. However, youll probably lose weight on this diet because the menus average only 1200-1700 calories a day - the real reason behind the weight loss. How easy is it to follow exact menus of 40/30/30 for the rest of your life That is a full-time job even for a registered dietitian.

Food Specific Diets

Eat Right 4 Your Type - The premise of this book is that you should eat only certain types of foods based on your blood type and ancestry. For example, if youre a type A, you have ancestors who were farmers, and you should be a vegetarian and avoid most animal products and meats. By contrast, if youre a type O, then your ancestors were likely hunters and gatherers, and you should eat lots of animal proteins and meats, but few carbohydrates. The claims are ridiculously unsubstantiated and not backed by any research. Beware of chiropractic nutrition.

The New Beverly Hills Diet - This book says that if you dont combine foods carefully, you gain weight. On the first two days of the diet, only certain fruits and vegetables are allowed. on the 3rd day only grapes - thats right, you eat only grapes for a whole day. The book goes further to state that one should never combine fats, proteins, or carbohydrates, or your digestive enzymes become confused. Thus, not only is the food not digested properly, but also, youll store fat. Imagine that. You will lose weight on this diet, but only because of the extremely low number of calories. No science whatsoever is behind any of its claims about food combining, digestion, or storage of fat.

The New Cabbage Soup Diet - You can eat as much cabbage soup, fruit, coffee, caffeine, and tea as you want on this diet, but not much else. Can you say, extremely low calorie diet that promotes rapid fluid loss and burning of valued muscle tissue to lose weight quickly Thats what this plan offers.

Low Fat Diets Laden with High Sugar, Fat-Free Products

Just like the stock market, diets come and go in big waves. Not too long ago, extremely low fat diets were all the rage and everyone was counting fat grams. Mistaken beliefs about weight loss arose from these types of diets as well. Many people thought that only fat in the diet could be stored as fat - wrong. All calories eaten in excess can be stored as fat. Many figured as long as the ice cream was fat-free, the calories did not matter - wrong again. Food manufacturers produced fat-free products in hoards, and people bought them right up. Its important to realize that fat-free does not necessarily equal healthy and good for you. Many of these products contain excessive amounts of sugar to replace the fat. Often, they contain a very similar amount of calories as the regular high-fat products. Our fat eating guidelines.

Choose a well-balanced diet moderately low in fat and saturated fat less than 30pct. of calories and 10pct. of calories respectively

Dont eat excessive amounts of processed fat-free products cookies, ice cream, potato chips and the like

Choose mostly unsaturated fats such as olive oil, canola oil, peanut butter, and nuts.

In short, with regard to all the plans above. dont follow a crazy, restrictive, unbalanced, expensive or unhealthy plan to lose weight. A mild caloric deficit, combined with exercise and behavior modification, is your biggest guarantee at losing weight, keeping it off, and doing it safely. And that, my friend, is backed by hundreds of controlled research studies and hundreds of thousands of long-term success stories, unlike the plans above.

The Picks of the Crop

Perhaps now youd like to know what are some of the best books on the subject of diet and weight loss, which share the following common traits.

Sound independent research supports the claims

A well-balanced diet, that is not too restrictive or difficult to follow, is advocated

Exercise is an important part of the plan, and not just mentioned briefly in passing

The foundation of the book in many cases advocates a behavioral approach to weight loss

The plan makes no magical claims of easy weight loss. However, the strategies the book promotes are the most time-tested ones that lead to permanent losses and lifelong changes.

The plans are safe to follow

The Best Diet Books.

The Diet Free Solution, by Laurel Mellin, M.A., R.D.

Thin For Life, by Anne Fletcher, M.S., R.D.

Intuitive Eating. A Recovery Book For the Chronic Dieter, by Evelyn Tribole, M.S., R.D.

Outsmarting The Female Fat Cell, by Debra Waterhouse, M.P.H., R.D.

Strong Women Stay Slim, by Miriam Nelson, Ph.D.

The Origin Diet, by Elizabeth Somer, M.A., R.D.

Dieting For Dummies, by Jane Kirby, R.D.

Make The Connection, by Oprah Winfrey and Bob Greene

Breaking Free From Compulsive Eating by Geneen Roth or any other book by this author


Group Weight Loss Programs

Weight Watchers - This program is a personal favorite of mine because Weight Watchers never resorts to fads or scams to sell its product. Even in the height of the low-carbohydrate diet craze, which is selling like mad, Weight Watchers continues to advocate a sensible, long-term approach to weight loss. The basis of the program is a reduced-calorie diet with no restriction of the types of foods you are allowed to eat, exercise, and behavior modification. The program also includes group counseling sessions and group support - two aspects that can be vital in maintaining lost weight. Clinical psychologists, exercise physiologists, and registered dietitians developed the Weight Watchers program. It maintains a very integrated approach to losing weight.

Jenny Craig - Jenny Craig is similar to Weight Watchers in that it offers a reduced-calorie diet, exercise, and behavior modification as the basis of the program. In addition, an integrated team of weight loss professionals developed the program. The drawback is that initially you must purchase only prepackaged Jenny Craig foods as your main meals. This leads to less awareness of how to eat and shop on your own, and a higher program cost than Weight Watchers.

Overeaters Anonymous - OA is not a weight loss program per se, but rather, a volunteer support group for those who admit to their inability to control their eating. OA is a 12- step program similar to Alcoholics Anonymous. It can be a great program if you truly feel you cannot manage food binges, and that food has taken over your life. No health care providers are on the staff. The support of the group and the seeking of a higher power and spiritual values and learning life skills are the mainstays of the program. Many have found OA to be the real answer to combating their food addictions.

TOPS Taking Off Pounds Sensibly TOPS is not a weight loss plan, but rather a non-profit, non-commercial weight loss support group. You bring your own diet and exercise plan and goals, and TOPS provides the environment to exchange ideas and support with others trying to lose weight. A volunteer leader runs local chapters, and health professionals often speak at the meetings.

The Solution - The solution is a group program, developed by Laurel Mellin, RD, an associate clinical professor of family and community medicine at UC San Francisco. Its main focus is not on a diet, but rather on healthy living, exercise, emotional healing, behavior modification, and nurturing the mind, body, and spirit. Mellin published a study in The Journal of the American Dietetic Association showing significant long-term weight loss success for those in her program. If youre a chronic overeater, or often eat when you are not hungry, a behavioral approach rather than a diet approach to weight loss is your best bet. The Solution is offered nationwide and is conducted by trained leaders.


How To Evaluate Diet Plans

Almost any commercial weight-loss diet can work, but only if it motivates you sufficiently to decrease the amount of calories you eat or increase the amount of calories you burn each day or both. Regardless of whether a diet plan works for you initially a few weeks or a few months, you must ask yourself whether it can work forever. Which elements of a weight-loss program should an intelligent consumer look for in judging its potential for safe and successful weight loss

A responsible and safe weight-loss program should have the following features.

The diet should be safe. It should include the Recommended Daily Allowances RDAs for vitamins, minerals, and protein. The weight-loss diet should reduce only calories, not essential foods and food groups. You should not have to buy supplements in order to meet your RDA. If the diet itself cant provide the RDA because it eliminates too many foods or food groups, the diet is unsafe.

The weight-loss program should work towards a slow, steady weight loss. Expect to lose only about a pound a week after the first week or two. With many calorie-restricted diets, you can initially lose weight rapidly during the first 1 to 2 weeks, but this loss is largely fluid.

If you plan to lose more than 15 to 20 pounds, have any health problems, or take medication on a regular basis, the program should recommend a physicians evaluation before you begin. A doctor can assess your general health and medical conditions that dieting and weight loss might affect. Also, a physician should be able to advise you on the need for weight loss, the appropriateness of the weight-loss program, and a sensible weight loss goal for you.

The program should include plans for weight maintenance after the weight loss phase ends. You dont want to lose a large amount of weight only to regain it. Weight maintenance can be the most difficult part of controlling weight. Select a program that helps in permanently changing your dietary habits and level of physical activity and alters a lifestyle that might have contributed to weight gain in the past. Your program should provide behavior modification help, including education in healthy eating habits and long-term plans to deal with your emotional and behavioral issues that lead to weight gain.

A commercial weight-loss program should provide a detailed statement of fees and costs of additional items such as dietary supplements. You shouldnt need to purchase a dietary supplement to lose weight successfully. If a program asks you to buy herbs, vitamins, minerals, or other supplements, you should thoroughly screen them before such a purchase. Ask your doctor or a registered dietitian at your local hospital about the need for such products, especially if they involve a large cost.

Have a good grasp on the credentials of those selling the program, the products, or the books. A truly successful weight loss program has a very integrated approach using several experts. It might have a physician to supervise the overall program, an exercise physiologist to counsel you on exercise, a psychologist or licensed counselor to discuss behavioral issues, and a registered dietitian to discuss nutrition and eating habits. Be aware that no legal definition exists for the term nutritionist. Anyone can legally call himself or herself a nutritionist. A registered dietitian is a legal term, however, and he or she must obtain a minimum of a bachelors degree in clinical nutrition or a related field, complete 900 hours of internship experience and pass a national exam, and most go on to pursue graduate degrees. The sales clerk in the nutritional supplements store is not usually a good source of nutrition advice. This is an area where all too many people claim to be experts. Check your sources of nutrition and weight loss advice carefully.

Dr. Atkins New Diet Revolution, by Dr. Robert C. Atkins, M.D.

This book is simply an update of Dr. Atkins previous diet, recycled here perhaps to encourage the sale of dietary supplements. Besides the health risks associated with ketosis outlined earlier, there are other long-term concerns associated with this particular plan.

Atkins diet can lead to the kind of rapid weight fluctuations that adversely effect the heart. Moreover, the breakdown of fatty acids that occurs during ketosis may also increase the risk of heart disease.

One of the basic tenets of Atkins diet is that sugar causes cancer. Such misleading pronouncements are essentially scare tactics, meant to direct the dieter towards foods on the Atkins plan.

Finally, nothing about this plan encourages the dieter to learn some very basic weight management strategies like portion control and serving sizes, let alone develop the skills necessary for a lifetime of balanced nutrition.

The South Beach Diet

The South Beach Diet

The South Beach Diet

This hugely popular diet promises diligent followers an initial weight loss of 8-13 pounds in the first two weeks. The emphasis is on avoiding highly processed carbohydrates, such as those found in baked goods, breads, snacks and soft drinks. Divided into three phases, the diet gradually reintroduces some initially forbidden foods. One premise of the diet is that low-fat prepared foods can be a bad idea except in the case of low-fat cheese, milk and yogurt. Exercise is not emphasized with this diet.

Overview

Developed by cardiologist Dr. Arthur Agatston, the South Beach Diet is self-described as neither low-fat nor low-carb, but rather a method that teaches followers to rely on the right carbs and the right fats.

Like the Atkins Diet, this plan is divided into phases. Phase One lasts 14 days, and is the strictest. Normal-sized portions of lean protein are allowed, as are vegetables, nuts, cheese and eggs. The goal of this phase is to eat three meals a day so that followers arent left feeling hungry, and to eliminate cravings for starches and sweets. Phase Two lasts until dieters reach their weight-loss goal, and reintroduces some foods that were banned in Phase One, such as whole-grain breads and dairy foods. Phase Three is all about maintenance, and is less a phase than a way of life.

Caveman diet

The Caveman diet is modeled after what our ancient ancestors ate in prehistoric times. It places a lot of emphasis on protein and takes a step away from cultivated products such as rice and bread. This diet is similar to the Atkins diet as it is mostly protein and fatty foods.

One example of a typical day includes. breakfasta grapefruit and a glass of orange juice. luncha tossed salad and all of the nuts you can eat. snacksas many apples as you desire. dinnerall the chicken you can stomach, along with two servings of vegetables. From this example, its easy to see what the diet would be like over a prolonged period of time.

This diet tends to lead to an unhealthy amount of fat consumption. Beyond that, it isnt very balanced in terms of vitamins. Since it is very low on carbs, it can also make people feel very tired and weak.

Protein power diet


The ideas behind the Protein Power Diet were originally published in 1996. The diet is similar to the Atkins diet and the Zone diet. Its high in protein and fat, and extremely low in carbohydrates. Protein power was written by the Eades husband and wife team. They are both doctors who say that you need to control insulin in order to promote health and to maintain weight.

People on this diet are only allowed to eat between 30-50 grams of carbohydrates per day. The actual amount depends upon your activity level. You need to count everything you consume while on this diet and eat foods at specific times. People on this diet may also want to invest in protein supplements.

One of the major drawbacks of this diet involves estimating how many carbs to eat in a day. This is quite hard if not impossible. Another problem revolves around the fact that you might not even have enough carbohydrates to function in the first place. There also isnt any proof that watching your insulin levels will lead to effective weight loss.


The Atkins Diet Articles.

The Diet Channel - The Atkins Diet - A Comprehensive Analysis

Tufts University Health and Nutrition Letter Is It Possible to Follow The Atkins Diet Healthfully
Read our Award Review.

Nutrition Action Healthletter Big Fat Lies. The Truth About the Atkins Diet
Read our Award Review.

American Council on Science and Health Atkins Evidence Still Unclear
Read our Award Review.

Web MD - The Atkins Diet
Read our Award Review.

SeekWellness Robert Atkins, Not A Wellness Promoter
Read our Award Review.

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Atkins Diet

The Atkins Diet

The Atkins Diet goes against much of the established advice of the previously held ideals in the health community in its acceptance of high fat and meat intake. Recent studies seem to show that followers lose weight at a greater rate than more traditional plans without serious effects on health. However, most people may have a very difficult time with Atkins restrictions, since they must fundamentally change the way they eat on a long-term basis, eliminating potatoes, pasta and sweets from their diets on a permanent basis.

Overview

The Atkins diet has a stated value of providing people with a lifetime of nutritional philosophy which restricts their intake of processed and refined carbohydrates and encourages consumption of nutrient-rich unprocessed foods such as meat while promoting the use of vita-nutrient supplements.

Atkins provides a series of dietary phases, which most people pass through sequentially. Additional diets are provided for those who cant follow the path of the majority, such as those with food intolerances and a high metabolic resistance. The first two weeks of Atkins is the induction phase. During these 14 days, dieters are cautioned to follow detailed instructions exactly. The point of induction is to kick-start the body into lipolysis/ketosis, during which the metabolism can be switched to one that primarily burns fat for energy.

During the next phase of the plan, the diet becomes less restrictive and more palatable, mainly by increasing the permitted vegetables and raising carbohydrate levels. Upon approaching their weight goal, dieters establish their critical carbohydrate level for maintenance, which is the highest number of grams of carbohydrates per day they can ingest without beginning to gain the lost weight back.

Foods You Can Eat

Atkins followers can eat all of the meat, cheese, eggs and fats like butter and oils that they like, without counting calories.

Foods You Cant Eat

Carbohydrates are restricted to around 20 grams per day in the first two weeks of Atkins. a weekly five-gram incremental gain is followed until the dieter establishes their critical carbohydrate level for maintenance. For the most part, successful followers of the Atkins diet must fundamentally change the way they eat on a long-term basis. This means eliminating foods like cake, potatoes, pasta, pancakes and pie from their diets, permanently. Fruit and dairy products are also extremely limited.

Eating Options

The Atkins diet places no limit on the amount of saturated-fat-laden products one can have each day. Large portions of foods like butter, red meat and bacon are advocated and encouraged. A limited amount of carbohydrates can be introduced in the maintenance phase.

Exercise Recommendations

For the most part, exercise is not strongly emphasized in the Atkins diet.

Number of Dieters

The last five years have seen an explosion in the number of people following the Atkins diet. In fact, many restaurants are now offering no- or low-carb options to suit patrons who opt to eat out while on Atkins. Anecdotal evidence suggests that this diet is one of the most popular diets around.

Success Rate

Precise numbers are difficult to come by, but recent studies have shown that after a few months of Atkins, people tend to lose about twice as much weight as they would on the standard low-fat, high-carbohydrate approach recommended by most health organizations. These studies seem to show that these dieters lose weight without seeming to drive up their risk of heart disease and that their cholesterol, triglycerides and blood pressure generally improve. Additionally, Atkins followers appear to lose more weight -- even while actually consuming more calories -- than people on other high-carb diets.

Post Diet Weight Maintenence Plans

The pre-maintenance phase of the Atkins diet increases the daily carbohydrate intake in 10-gram increments each week so long as gradual weight loss is maintained. Upon achieving their goal weight, dieters move to the lifetime maintenance phase, which urges followers to make choices from Atkins recipes and foods while controlling carbohydrate intake indefinitely.

Low Carb CrazeIt has been 10 years since Dr. Robert Atkins re-introduced his 1970s low carb diet program known in the 70s as Dr. Atkins Diet Revolution. The book, now known as Dr. Atkins New Diet Revolution has flooded the market, producing what can only be termed low carb mania in the United States and abroad. Millions have tried his diet, and his books have been on the bestseller lists for a decade. It has been estimated that nearly 25 million Americans are on a low carb diet during any given period. Dozens of low carb products continue to flood the market, reminiscent of the 80s and early 90s fat free everything era. Just what is the Atkins diet, and whats the bottom line behind its safety and long term effectiveness

How the Atkins Diet WorksThe first two weeks of the Atkins diet is termed the induction period. During this time, dieters are permitted to eat no more than 20 grams of carbohydrates per day. This translates into a diet consisting of nearly unlimited meats, poultry, seafood, eggs, cheeses, oils, butter, margarine, bacon, and sausages. The 20 gram carb limit is generally derived from trace amounts of carbs in sauces, dressings, cheeses and a couple cups of lettuce greens or vegetables daily. During these two weeks, participants are not allowed to have any milk, fruits, grains, cereals, breads or high glycemic index vegetables such as potatoes, peas, corn and carrots. After the first two weeks, dieters can begin adding about 5 more grams of carbohydrates to their diet weekly. Generally, a diet consisting of no more than 40 to 90 grams of carbohydrates is what dieters must stick to long term, in the maintenance phase. Even this is a scant amount of carbohydrate compared to what health experts and major health organizations recommend.

Is the Atkins Diet good for Cancer PreventionNot until the inception of low carb mania would anyone have thought it wise to limit their intake of healthy fruits, vegetables and whole grain breads and cereals. But, since these are high carb foods, you will be limited to small amounts of these nutritious staples on the Atkins plan. Lets compare the Atkins diet plan to the diet recommendations from the American Cancer Society for optimal cancer prevention.

Eat five or more optimally nine servings of fruits and vegetables daily. include fruits and vegetables at every meal and for snacks.

If one were to consume a fruit and vegetable at each meal and snack this would tabulate to upwards of 85 grams of carbohydrate, the upper end of the maintenance phase limit on the Atkins plan. Forget about having any healthy whole grains, legumes or milk products for the rest of the day. This recommendation would be extremely difficult to adhere to even on the maintenance phase of the Atkins plan.

Choose whole grains in preference to processed grains and sugars

Will you have anything left in your daily carb ration to have healthy whole grain products like bran, whole wheat bread, brown rice, oats, and whole grain cereals Considering each serving of these healthy foods contains a whopping 15 grams of carbohydrate, probably not. Forget about beans and legumes too, despite the fact that they are a nutrition powerhouse, they simply have too many carbs.....

Limit consumption of red meats, especially those high in fat and processed

There is no limit on the Atkins plan to the amount of protein, fats and red meats one can consume. There is little else to eat other than these foods with such a significant carbohydrate restriction.

Current estimates are that nearly 33-50pct. of cancers can be prevented through a healthy diet. The recommendations above come from hundreds of research studies which show a link between cancer prevention and a high intake of fruits, vegetables, whole grains and legumes. Hundreds of studies also support the link between a high fat diet, high intake of red meats and increased incidence of cancer. The Atkins plan defies all this research and translates into a diet that may put you at increased cancer risk. Dont think that adding supplements to your diet - which you must do on the Atkins plan - equals the same nutrition you get from eating real foods. Fruits, vegetables and whole grains are loaded with thousands of substances, called phytochemicals, which are showing significant promise in chronic disease prevention. How these substances work to prevent illness, cancer, and disease is not completely understood. To be effective, these chemicals interact with each other and the complex combinations can only be obtained from eating whole foods. You simply cant get all these phytochemicals in a pill.

Healthy Populations Eat CarbsThe idea that significant amounts of carbohydrates in the diet lead to obesity and illness a concept supported by low carb plans is completely contradicted in many global epidemiological studies. For example, Japan, which has some of the worlds lowest rates of obesity, heart disease, cancer and diabetes, has a diet which is very rich in carbohydrate content. The Japanese enjoy rice, vegetables, beans and legumes, and fruits at most meals. They have a diet that is very low in saturated fat and red meats. however it is high in fish which contain protective omega-3 fatty acids. The healthy, yet high carb, traditional Japanese style diet would be contraindicated under the Atkins plan. What a shame considering how much more healthy this population is than America.

What About the Studies that Say the Atkins Diet is OKIn the past year, two studies have been published on the effectiveness of the Atkins diet versus a standard low-fat, low-calorie diet in two reputable medical journals, The New England Journal of Medicine, and Annals of Internal Medicine. The findings were indeed surprising, in that several heart disease indicators actually improved in the participants following the Atkins diet. They saw a much larger decrease in serum triglyceride levels as compared to the low fat group, and a greater increase in serum HDL which is good or beneficial cholesterol to the heart than the low-fat group. Both groups saw similar reductions in LDL cholesterol the bad cholesterol for the heart and total cholesterol levels. In addition, at the end of one year, both groups had achieved similar levels of weight loss.

There are, however, a few important facts that surfaced in these studies that seem to have been overlooked in media reports. First of all, about 40pct. of the participants in each diet group dropped out of the study before its completion due to inability to adhere to either diet. That indicates about a 3 out of 5 chance that you will be able to stick to either diet for a year. In addition, while the Atkins group lost on average 15.4 pounds after six months, by the end of the year, their total weight loss averaged only 9.7 pounds. The study shows that by the end of the year, the Atkins dieters had regained 1/3 of their weight. This is in keeping with what we have known about diets all along - diets, especially those with severe restrictions in foods we enjoy, are extremely difficult to stick to long term. Additionally, most people end up regaining lost weight on severely restricted diets because of difficulty adhering to the restrictions long-term. Dont hold your breath on the long term weight loss effectiveness of severely restricted diets.

Bottom Line. Restricting Calories is what Causes Weight LossA recent research study conducted by the North American Association for the Study of Obesity showed that Atkins dieters cut their normal daily caloric intake by 1,000 calories while following the Atkins plan. Additional research has shown that during the ongoing weight loss phase, Atkins dieters consumed only 1500 calories a day on average, much less than their previous caloric intake. Furthermore, in the research study presented in The Annals of Internal Medicine above, scientists found that in both the low-fat diet group and in the Atkins diet group, calorie consumption was reduced as compared to the participants previous diets. This only goes to show what weve known all along as the bottom line in weight loss. calories eaten must be less than calories burned for weight loss to occur. With so little food choices on the Atkins diet, its easy to see why people eat fewer calories and therefore lose weight. Theres nothing magical behind the hype about low carb plans.

Rates of Obesity Climbing StillSince the inception of his first low carb diet book in the 1970s, Atkins books have sold over 15 million copies. Since the 2nd takeoff of his revised book in 1994, several other best-selling books advocating a low carb plan flew off the shelves too. Millions were made in sales of low-carb copycats like Protein Power, The Carbohydrate Addicts Lifespan Program and The Zone, which further propelled the low-carb movement. With millions upon millions having tried a low carb plan as a weight loss solution since the early 90s and before, surely we would see a significant decline in obesity rates, right On the contrary, from 1991-2001 obesity rates in America have jumped from 12pct. to 20.9pct., and we continue to see a rise today. Paradoxically, as more and more diet books appear, the weight loss industry gets richer and America grows fatter. Diets alone, especially very restrictive diets, are not the answer to long term weight loss.

Health Risks on AtkinsWhile many following the Atkins plan will never suffer any serious or major side effects, probably due to inability to adhere to the diet long term, a great many have suffered serious consequences. For one thing, we know that extremely high protein diets, like Atkins, can lead to acidic urine. Acidic urine leaches calcium from the body which significantly increases ones risk for osteoporosis and kidney stones. On the website atkinsdietalert.org, we learn about a man from Florida whose cholesterol shot up from 146 to 230 after two months following the Atkins plan. Rachel Huskey, just 16 years old, who collapsed and died due to electrolyte imbalances probably attributed to the Atkins plan. and a woman from California who experienced gall bladder disease and kidney stones which is a common occurrence due to calcium loss after just six months on the Atkins diet.

Why is Our Country ObeseIf you were to take Atkins and many other low-carb advocates at their word, many would solely blame the low fat diet as Americas obesity problem. What Atkins and other low-fat bashers will not tell you, however, is that America has never really followed a low-fat diet, despite health experts recommendations. The National Center for Health Statistics shows little to no change in Americas total daily fat gram consumption since the early 70s. In addition, our consumption of added fats and oils in the diet has significantly increased since that time. Another fact that low carb proponents fail to tell us is that as a nation, we eat on average 500 more calories a day than we did in 1980. Remember that old basic weight loss equation - calories in must be less than calories out - thats still the bottom line. Many other events have triggered skyrocketing obesity rates including less exercise, the advent of super-sized portions and more frequent dining out. Lets get a typical day in the life of the American to explain our obesity problem. Get in the car, sit at the desk at work, grab lunch from the vending machine or fast food, indulge in a high calorie snack mid-day, grab something else for dinner from the drive through because its a pain to make dinner at home, sit in front of the TV, eat chips and ice cream unconsciously, go to bed. Sounds like a pretty food toxic and sedentary lifestyle, huh America needs to get moving and begin to reduce portion sizes and make healthier food choices.

Long Term Weight Loss. How Do We Achieve ItDieting alone seems to have a pretty dismal outlook for long term weight control. But, we have much to learn from the thousands of people enrolled in the National Weight Control Registry. The average registrant in this program has lost 60 pounds and kept it off for five years. Not surprisingly, very few of the participants report following a low-carb or Atkins style diet as their method of achieving long-term weight loss. Actually, the vast majority report the following as their keys to living a healthy lifestyle, and maintaining lost weight. they eat on average 24pct. of their calories from fat, they expend about 2800 calories weekly in exercise, they dont skip breakfast, and most continuously monitor their eating behavior, often through using a food diary. Most of the methods the participants followed have been well established for decades as the best ways to lose weight and keep it off. But, in Americas constant search for an easy, magic bullet, we continue to defy common sense and research and get lured right into the next weight loss craze.

Whats Left to EatBig distinctions need to be made between healthy and unhealthy foods. No one will argue with Dr. Atkins advice to limit sugary processed foods, like cakes, cookies, ice cream, candies, doughnuts, chips, crackers, French fries, and processed breads and flours. There is little in these foods that will serve your chances at optimal health and weight control. However - when a plan starts telling you to limit foods that have been proven to be healthy, like fruits, vegetables, legumes and whole grains buyer beware. Just like there is a distinction between good carbs and bad carbs, fats in the diet can be good or bad as well. Some fats have been proven again and again to be detrimental to your health - these include butter, cream, animal fats, high fat dairy products, margarines that contain hydrogenated oils, and fatty red meats. On the other hand, some fats, like olive oil, canola oil, oils in fish, and nuts and seeds, can be very good for you. Americas mindset needs to switch from following restrictive fads to beginning to follow a diet that is best for health. Often when we see a switch of mindset to choosing foods for health, rather than thinness, weight loss generally follows. This is especially true when regular exercise, an individualized eating plan, and behavior modification strategies are thrown into the mix. Common sense strategies, yes, but they are the only ones proven to work long-term. For more advice on how to choose methods that will help your chances at long-term weight control, see our article, Successful Weight Loss Tips.

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If fad diets arent the key, just what are the best methods for long-term weight loss success Well explore this topic and link you to the best sites on the net to answer this pressing question and more.

THE DIET CHANNEL Best of the Net Links for more Atkins Diet Info.

Web MD - The Atkins Diet

Oxygen Network - Atkins Diet Review

UC Berkeley Wellness Letter - Eat Fat, Get Thin

Quackwatch - Low Carbohydrate Diets

USA Today - Success of Atkins Diet is in the Calories