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Sometimes,
a Healthy
Weight is the Way to Go
When overweight clients ask a dietitian
Cindy Wong what a healthy weight is, she tells them it's not necessarily
as low as they might think.
In light of the obesity epidemic,
that news might make a sizable difference to the two-thirds of
people who are overweight and the one-third who are obese.
Some experts define healthy weight
as a body mass index under 25 (a person 5-foot-5 who weighs 150
pounds has a BMI of 25). Others say a person is allowed 100 pounds
for the first five feet of height and five pounds for every additional
inch.
Wong advises people to take those
formulas as guidelines and to think about healthy weight a little
differently.
If someone's weight is close to
those guidelines and the person doesn't have blood pressure problems,
cholesterol problems, aches and pains and other health concerns,
they're probably at a fairly healthy weight, she says.
And with January 18 to 24 declared
Healthy Weight Week, experts hope more Americans will try to shed
pounds and get to a healthier weight, if not a healthy one.
Currently, many Americans put on
a pound or two a year as they move from early adulthood to middle
age. So when their 40th or 50th birthday rolls around, they're
officially overweight or even obese.
"Exercise is one key," Wong says.
She tells her patients to exercise at least 30 minutes a day.
Buying a pedometer can help you
keep track, especially if you've been sedentary and need some
extra motivation. Most experts suggest starting by trying to get
in 2,000 extra steps a day. That's the equivalent of about a mile
and will burn an extra 100 calories.
When it comes to food, pay attention
to portion control, as well as calories. For weight loss, figure
you need to eat 500 fewer calories a day to achieve a slow, reasonable
weight loss of a pound a week; maybe less of a calorie deficit
if you are increasing your exercise.
While slow and steady can be frustrating
if you need to lose a lot of weight, experts say cutting back
even just 50 calories a day and expending an extra 50 in activity
will at least keep you from getting heavier.
Diet and exercise aren't the whole
story, says another expert, Anne M. Fletcher, a Minnesota dietitian
who has written several books, including one in which she interviewed
people who shed pounds and kept them off.
"If you lose weight by diet and
exercise alone, and you don't change anything else in your life,
you are probably going to gain it back," she says.
What's missing from that equation?
"It's the whole head thing," she says.
"Look at why you overeat, and what
is your motivation to change, which is where I think the real
solution lies," she says.
Instead of considering your new
eating plan a diet, look at it as a healthier approach to eating
that you will probably follow the rest of your life if you want
to keep off the pounds.
And, a final question worth asking,
Fletcher says, is: "How can you get pleasure from life from stuff
other than food?"
Curling up with a good book, catching
a flick (without the popcorn) and even shopping can be very satisfying,
she notes.
"Learn how to get more out of life
so food isn't your only reward that you have for yourself," Fletcher
says.
More information
For information on staying physically
active, see America
on the Move. For healthy eating tips, visit the American
Dietetic Association.
Reference
Source 101
For more information on how to prevent other diseases, use
PreventDisease.com's "Quick
Prevention Resources".
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