• Sign up
  • ‎What is Shvoong?‎
  • Sign In
    Sign In
    Remember my username Forgot your password?

Summaries and Short Reviews

.

Shvoong Home>Medicine & Health>Know the Risks involved in dieting Summary

.

Know the Risks involved in dieting

Book Abstract by: Seena Vincent     

Original Author: sw
 
Any attempts in the name of dieting to deny your body of the essential, well-balanced nutrients and calories
it needs to function to its fullest capacity may lead to problems. Americans spend more than $40 billion dollars a year on dieting and diet-related products. That’s roughly equivalent to the amount the U.S. Federal Government spends on education each year. It is estimated that 40-50% of American women are trying to lose weight at any point in time. One recent study revealed that 91% of women on a college campus had dieted. Researchers estimate that 40-60% of high school girls are on diets Another study found that 46% of 9-11 year olds are sometimes or very often on diets 
What You Should Know Dieting rarely works. 95% of all dieters regain their lost weight and more within 1 to 5 years. Dieting can be dangerous has been shown to have negative health effects, including increased risk of heart disease, long-lasting negative impacts on metabolism, etc. Dieting forces your body into starvation mode. It responds by slowing down many of its normal functions to conserve energy. This means your natural metabolism actually slows down. Dieters often miss out on important nutrients. For example, dieters often don’t get enough calcium, leaving them at risk for osteoporosis, stress fractures, and broken bones. Dieters often experience physical consequences such as loss of muscular strength and endurance decreased oxygen utilization thinning hair loss of coordination dehydration and electrolyte imbalances fainting, weakness, and slowed heart rates
Dieting also impacts your mind. When you restrict calories you restrict your energy, which in turn can restrict your brainpower. Medical studies indicate that people on diets have slower reaction times and a lesser ability to concentrate than people not on a diet. All of the stress and anxiety about food and weight that preoccupy dieters actually can consume a portion of a dieters’ working memory capacity. Numerous studies link chronic dieting with feelings of depression, low-self-esteem and increased stress. Dieting can lead to an eating disorder. Many studies and many health professionals note that patients with eating disorders were dieting at the time of the development of their eating disorder. Dieting may not cause an eating disorder, but the constant concern about body weight and shape, fat grams and calories can start a vicious cycle of body dissatisfaction and obsession that can lead all too quickly to an eating disorder.
Just imagine all of the time and energy you could save for other activities and interests in your life if you decided to stop dieting. We all need to take care of our bodies and make sure that we are fueling them with a nutritional balance of foods, but we don’t need to let the way our body curves or doesn’t curve determine how we feel about ourselves or how we live our lives. Next time the dieting desire crosses your mind, take a time-out. Think about the reasons why you want to lose weight. Are they really worth it? Think about the potential dangers of dieting. And, most of all, take the time to remember that you are worth so much more than what you weigh!
Published: March 29, 2007
Please Rate this Review : 1 2 3 4 5

Bookmark & share this post

.