Many desperate people turn to crash diets
hoping they will lose the most weight in the shortest time that way. Perhaps
they have had past experiences of losing weight successfully with this type of
plan, or they have read about a new diet that some celebrity has followed to
lose weight fast. So what is wrong with crash diets? Is there any reason why
they have such a bad reputation?
The most obvious problem with crash diets
is that the weight loss is almost always temporary. If you suddenly change to a
restricted diet, your body will respond by storing less water. You will lose
weight and be less bloated, i.e. thinner, but you will not necessarily lose any
fat. When you end the diet that weight will go right back on.
Of course, you may lose some fat too,
depending on the diet and how long you follow it. However, the body often goes
into starvation mode during these diets. It thinks a famine has hit, and it
should slow down the metabolism and store as much fat as possible to guard
against the hard times ahead. When you increase your food consumption, even if
you do it in a healthy way, that famine metabolism can persist and lead your
body to gain some or all of the weight back.
Added to that is the psychological effect
of breaking a crash diet. Whether this happens at the end of the planned diet
or in the middle out of desperation, it tends involve overeating. For this
reason alone, many people who follow crash diets find that a month later, they
are heavier than they were before the diet.
In addition, there are some significant
health issues with crash diets. First, diets that focus on losing weight fast
are usually very restrictive in the types of foods that you can eat. Many foods
(and sometimes whole food groups) will be cut out. This is not something you
could do in the long term without suffering from deficiencies. It is not good
for the body in the short term either.
On many crash diets you will not be getting
the nutrients that the body needs. It is true that you can take supplements,
but many supplements rely on substances in whole foods to make them work most
effectively. Nutrient deficiencies lead to cravings, making it harder to stick
to the diet and more likely that you will break out in a binge. At the same
time, you may be getting more of some nutrients than is healthy.
To summarize, crash diets can only ever be
a temporary solution, for example for a situation where you need to lose a
little weight for a particular event, and you do not mind if you gain it back -
and more - afterward. The healthiest option for losing weight is to make
changes that will allow you to lose weight slowly on a healthy eating plan that
does not ban any foods completely, but allows you to incorporate occasional
treats. In the long term, people who follow crash diets are likely to gain
weight, not lose it.
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