Search
Recommended Sites
Related Links






Valid XHTML 1.0 Transitional

Valid CSS!
   

Informative Articles

7 Excuses For Not Starting Up Your Weight Loss Diet
Changing habits is one of the most difficult challanges we human beings are facing. This also applies to changing food habits, and especially starting a weight loss diet, when you are used to eating what you want when you want it. When we feel...

Eat Your Way To Clear Skin With An Acne Diet?
There are Many conflicting theories about an anti-acne diet. Many doctors ignore this matter completely, while a lot of magazines offer "perfect" and "100% sure" acne diets. Where's the truth? Is there any diet that can really cure acne? ...

Is there a role for nutrition in dealing with hair loss?
Could something as basic as inadequate nutrition really contribute to excessive shedding of hair? Does sensible nutrition have a role to play in helping hair to regrow? The answer to both questions is yes! There is no doubt that poor nutrition and...

Sushi is Ideal for Healthy Diets
Sushi, popular for centuries in Japan, has become immensely popular in the Western world in recent years. You may soon find yourself invited to enjoy sushi with friends at a sushi bar or restaurant. Despite the common reaction of distaste at...

The Power of Capsulized Foods
For most people, the concept of capsulized food™ usually conjures up images of space travelers ingesting meals condensed into a compact pill. However, in modern-day reality, things are quite different. Capsulized foods are one of the most innovative...

 
Is Zone Diet a Fad?




Health Castle offers "Ten signs of a fad diet":


1. It promises massive weight loss (1 - 2 lbs per week)


Dr. Barry Sears is careful when he declares a standard weight loss on Zone diet. He considers that anything between 1 to 1,5 lbs per week is satisfactory. "It will be impossible to lose more than one to one point five pounds of fat per week. Anything over that is loss of retained water", says Sears himself on his daily "Ask Dr. Sears" column at DrSears.com. FAD.


2. It does not suggest you that you consult with a registered dietician or nutritionist


"Any change in diet (for better or worse) will affect the metabolism of the drug(s) you are taking. Always consult with a physician before starting the Zone Diet or any other dietary plan", says Dr. Sears in various interviews and discussion lists. Not FAD.


3. It encourages you to eliminate certain food groups (e.g. "low carb diets", "low fat diets")


This is untrue for the Zone diet. Dr. Sears says: "No food is forbidden in the Zone." Zone diet considers "unfavourable" mostly high glycemic foods and foods high in saturated fats. Not FAD.


4. It offers rigid menus


Difficult-to-prepare meals, plenty of measuring and counting, rules that are easy to misinterpret, Zone subscribes to that. FAD


5. It neglects active living or lifestyle changes


The Zone diet has impressive instrumentary and regulation for dining out or for fast food. On the other hand, there's no problem if you step out of the Zone now and then. Here are some soothing phrases from Dr. Sears himself: "The Zone diet is free of guilt" or "The Zone is just one meal away". I'm quite UNDECIDED about this one. It is clear the man has taken some time to think about it.


6. It harshly limitates the daily calorie intake


Some dieticians claim that the Zone diet limits the daily calorie intake to somewhere around 800. I used the calculator at DrSears.com to check this (I am a 100 pound woman by the way) and my daily calorie intake resulted around 1100 kcal. I'm not pleased with it, as I don't plan to spend my days in permanent hibernation, or lose any of my precious, hard-gained pounds... FAD.


7. It contradicts what most trusted health profesionals say


The Zone diet argues against the USDA food pyramid, which recommends grains and starches up to five servings per day. This is its most high-profile argument. The American Heart Association considers Zone "a fad diet". FAD


8. It depends on special products, supplements and treatments


One Zone bar (or shake) is $2.50. A 45-day supply bottle of Omega Rx concentrated fish oil is $78.15. The figure for the Zone books ranges between $6 and $26 (at the Zone Labs online shop); FAD.


9. It makes miraculous claims


The Zone will help you to:



  • lose up to 1.5 lbs body fat per week

  • improve your insulin level (which should particulary be ... "not too high not too low")

  • fight against "modern diseases" such as type II diabetes and blood vessel affections

  • fight against "mental illnesses" such as depresion and alcoholism

  • prevent "certain" cancers

  • "restore energy", says Dr. Sears in his book, Enter the Zone, "especially if you have CMS, PMS or even HIV infection" and...

  • The Zone itself is defined as a state of well-being in which you do not experience hunger, fatigue or moodiness. Your body and mind function sharply at their "peak level".




The Zone is a FAD diet in this respect.


10. It relies on testimonials and success stories rather than scientific proof


Dr. Sears says "Let me be a little more specific about the rewards you'll reap from staying in the Zone" ("Enter the Zone", p. 4). A few paragraphs later he tells the happy stories of Steve Courson (a famous National Football League player in the late 1970's), his teammate John Corb and Dr. Chris Kyriazis, head of European Marketing for IBM. I believe these examples are not specific but unusual. Moreover, Dr. Sears' Zone diet is mistrusted by most dieticians and nutritionists as so far he has not published any relevant, professional research to sustain his theory. FAD again.






Iulia Pascanu writes for http://www.enterthezonediet.com where you can find more information about the Zone Diet.
Please feel free to use this article in your Newsletter or on your website. If you use this article, please include the resource box and send a brief message to let me know where it appeared: iuliap@gmail.com




Sign up for PayPal and start accepting credit card payments instantly.