Search:
San Francisco Restaurants -
Restaurants -
Music -
Meta Web Search -
Meta Local Search -
News -
Quotes -
Encyclopedia -
Dictionary -
Images -
Blogs -
Videos
Home » Article » Weight-Loss Prescription Without The Pharmacy
Sherri L Dodd filed under "Weight-Loss"
|
After several months of noticing consistent weight gain, a
thirty-five year old woman decides to visit her doctor. She is
amazed that the extra weight seems to have come from out of the
blue and proclaims her diet has never been a problem before now?
She wondered if it could be her thyroid (a frequent complaint of
her mother’s). Or maybe pregnancy? Even worse, could it be some
chronic condition? And, forget about what it could be, what
could the doctor give her to lose the weight and regain her
energetic zest? After a thorough checkup and confirmed lab
results, the doctor found nothing of concern, but did write Mary
a prescription – one mile of walking per day, five times a week.
This action is not so absurd. According to the Archives of
Internal Medicine, more and more doctors are being encouraged by
their industry’s board of superiors to write prescriptions of
exercise for their patients, especially those with obesity
issues. And fortunately, they are conceding.
The estimated figure of premature death rate resulting from
obesity-related afflictions (heart disease, diabetes, etc.) is
300,000 per year. This equates to healthcare costs of up to $90
billion! There would be a substantial drop in these cases if
patients would participate in physical activity. Not only would
it help to lower their body weight, it could among many things,
lower high risk factors of heart disease such as high
cholesterol and hypertension.
Since individuals seek out medical advice long before they
consider assistance from a personal trainer, the measure argued
the importance of doctors condoning the use of exercise to
assist with obesity problems. With the medical field supporting
the notion of a fitness program, it serves as reinforcement for
the general population of Americans to make exercise an
essential part of their lives.
Guidelines included discussing the following topics with the
patient:
•Assessing BMI and explaining what the results mean •Referring
to general nutrition of good health •Suggesting an approximate
500 calorie decrease in the person’s diet •Writing an actual
prescription (nothing beats instruction in black and white form)
•Giving Lifestyle amendments to expend calories, such as taking
stairs instead of elevators or walking during a lunch break
•Recommending a pedometer and a minimum of 10,000 steps per day
•Introducing the benefits of strength training, and how to get
started
As the subject in our story discovered, metabolism begins to
naturally slow down as we age, but there are actions we can take
to help the situation. You do not have to wait for your doctor
to write you a prescription for treatment. You do not even have
to hit the local drugstore to obtain over-the-counter medicine.
Exercise is a therapy that is always accessible to you and
nothing beats the resulting quality of life that it has to
offer.
About the author:
Sherri Dodd is the creator and author of Mom Looks Great - The
Fitness Program for Moms. She is an ACE-certified Personal
Trainer and Lifestyle & Weight Management Consultant with over
fifteen years of exercise experience. She has lectured to groups
of 100+ people on her fitness plan and is a freelance writer on
the topics of fitness and general nutrition as well as the
humorous side of motherhood.
|
|