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Diet Pills May Suppress Appetite, but
Low-Carb Nutrition and Whole Food Supplements Work Far Better
Copyright © 2006 Truth Publishing
A Paris-based pharmaceutical company has unveiled an experimental new
drug to combat obesity. The drug is, according to preliminary research
data, a powerful appetite suppressant. Prescribe it to patients, the
thinking goes, and they'll automatically eat less. Sounds good at first,
but here's the real story on appetite suppressants and prescription
drugs.
Appetite suppressants initially seem to be a promising strategy for
weight loss. By taking a prescription drug or an herbal supplement, the
body will theoretically shut down its hunger and automatically eat less.
As a result, the person will drop excess body fat and experience a
steady decline in all the obesity-related risk factors: diabetes, heart
disease, stroke, and so on. It all sounds great at first, but a closer
look at the complex relationship between people and their foods reveals
that this approach is only minimally successful, at best.
Here's why: appetite is actually stimulated by the consumption of
processed foods and refined carbohydrates. When a person drinks a soft
drink, eats a donut, or consumes refined white sugar, the resulting
swings in blood sugar cause a hunger spike to arise a few hours later.
Hunger signals are further strengthened when a person suffers from
common nutritional deficiencies (virtually all Americans are deficient
in zinc, vitamin D, various B vitamins, magnesium and other important
nutrients). After years of experimentation, and after spending hundreds
of dollars on various appetite suppressants (discussed below), I have
come to the conclusion that the very best way to control appetite is to
avoid refined carbohydrates and get superior nutrition from whole food
supplements. I've tried all the "natural" appetite suppressants: hoodia,
jojoba, green tea, fiber supplements and so on. None come even close to
the appetite suppressing power of simply avoiding all refined
carbohydrates such as white bread, rice, flour, high fructose corn
syrup, sugars, tortillas, cereals and so on.
The only carbohydrates that don't trigger subsequent hunger are whole
grains such as quinoa or boiled whole grain kamut, for example.
Everything else in the carbohydrate world, including oatmeal and Cream
of Wheat, is a strong appetite stimulant that will only make you eat
more.
The bottom line here is that you don't need drugs to suppress your
appetite. All you need is the knowledge to make better informed food
choices and avoid all processed carbohydrates. This means absolutely no
cookies, crackers, breads, baked goods, pasta, and so on. Do this and
your appetite will fall on its own. You'll automatically eat less, lose
weight, and save a fortune by avoiding prescription drugs. It's almost
like following a low-carb diet, except you can have all the fruits and
vegetables you want, as long as they're eaten in their raw form and not
processed (orange juice, for example, would be a no-no).
All of this doesn't mean appetite suppressant drugs and diet pills won't
be successful in the marketplace: most people would rather take a
shortcut to losing weight if there's one available. But here's why the
drugs won't work very well: even if your appetite is artificially
reduced by the drugs, your body will keep on craving until it gets the
nutrients it needs. If you don't supplement your diet with whole food
and superfood supplements (like chlorella and spirulina) that provide
superior nutrition, your body will be in a never-ending state of
nutrient deficiency, and turning off the hunger signals will be all but
impossible, no matter how powerful the drug.
So a person on appetite suppressing drugs will only succeed if they take
an active role in their own nutrition by consuming superfoods and
avoiding refined carbohydrates. And if they do that, they don't need the
drugs in the first place. In effect, the drugs are really just hype, and
they don't represent a reasonable approach to reducing obesity. Or, to
summarize this entire article in one phrase: it's the food choice,
stupid! Choose the wrong foods on a regular basis, and all the drugs in
the world won't make you thin. But choose the right foods at every meal,
and you'll be thin without needing drugs.
Mike Adams, "The Health Ranger," is chief contributor and editor of the
NewsTarget Network, a leading independent news source for natural
health, nutrition, medicine and other wellness topics. NewsTarget and
Webseed.com are leading information resources for consumers seeking
non-corrupted information on natural health and nutrition. Other
articles can be found easily at
http://www.newstarget.com
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