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What Are The Right Ways To
Manage Your Weight?
Obesity or overweight will
increase one’s risk of premature
death and chronic diseases such
as diabetes, hypertension,
stroke, high cholesterol, and
heart disease. Reduction of
weight can not only lower these
risks but also improve one’s
appearance, quality of life, and
mental health.
However, it is important that an
obese individual should seek
proper advice from medical
doctor or professional health
personnel on how to lose weight,
especially when he or she
already has some medical
disorders.
Diet, exercise, and behavioral
therapy are the three essential
elements for any treatment of
obesity. These are the advices
given by a senior consultant
endocrinologist.
Skipping any of the three main
meals should not be taken as a
weight control method. Instead,
patients should follow
dietitian’s advice to take the
most appropriate diet with
adequate size without needing
snacks between meals to lose
weight. Patients should also
learn how to read food labels
and glycaemic index of foods.
Exercise burns calories.
Exercising at the right
intensity and duration can burn
fats almost exclusively at the
so-called “Fat-Burn Zone”, when
patient’s target heart rate is
at 60 to 70 percent of the
maximum heart rate (MHR)
calculated based on the
patient’s age. For example, a 30
year-old patient’s target heart
rate is equal to 114 beats per
minute (calculated from the
formula: (220 minus 30) x 60%).
He needs to exercise at least 3
times a week to be effective.
Behavioral modification plays an
important role if patient wants
to achieve long-term weight
loss. Behavioral therapy can
help change key attitudes,
motivate self-change while
maintaining self-esteem, manage
stress and depression, etc.
Besides the three ways mentioned
above, slimming medications can
be a useful adjunct. They must,
however, never be used alone.
With medical supervision,
slimming medications can
sometimes achieve excellent
results in weight reduction and
weight maintenance. These can
only be used for patients with
BMI of 30 kg/m2 and above, and
those with BMI of 27 kg/m2 and
above with concomitant medical
problems that include diabetes,
stroke, hypertension, and heart
disease. The medications should
not be prescribed to patients
below the age of 18 and women
who are pregnant or
breastfeeding.
Surgery is another alternative
for those morbidly obese (BMI 40
kg/m2 and above) or those with
BMI of 35 to 39.9 kg/m2 with
severe medical problems. This
should be taken as the last
resort when all the above means
have been used for more than 6
months and failed to achieve any
significant weight loss. Gastric
bypass, gastric placation, and
gastric banding are some of the
usual surgical procedures.
Prevention is better than cure.
So, the best approach is not to
become overweight. Having a
healthy lifestyle and regular
physical activity will make one
more likely to achieve and
maintain a healthy weight.
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