Tired of my griping? So am I, but it
comes with the territory. When your voice is in the minority, and you are
trying to educate Type 2s, pre-diabetics, the overweight and obese, and just
about the whole human race, about “healthy eating,” and your message is
contrary to what is held as “perceived wisdom” by all the power-that-be
(government, the medical establishment, big pharma and agribusiness), you’re
constantly griping about their
message. Besides, I am predisposed to be a contrarian. A newspaper editor once
asked me to write a “Country Curmudgeon” column.
So, when I read the subject line on
my Medscape Medical News feed, I assumed, wrongly as it turns out, that I was
being fed more bad advice by “our experts.” Turns out, the tips put together by
Laurie Scudder, DNP, NP, Executive Editor of Medscape, were pretty good. Not
once did I see the words “saturated fat” or “fat,” or “cholesterol.” There was
a little more of the “fruits and vegetables” pitch than I would have liked, but
it was not her central message. So, take a look at the list. Her slide title
was, “Weight Loss Pearls: Helping Patients Help Themselves.” I like it already!
The title page introduces
“the most successful clinical gems to help overweight and obese patients.”
#1: Strategize
for initial success: success at 1 month “was the strongest unique predictor” of
12mo. weight loss.
#2: “The Basics,” they bear repeating: “Eat Real Food,
Watch Portions, Turn TV off, Sit Down to Eat.”
#3: “Eliminate sugary beverages (regular soda &
fruit drinks); also, white flour snacks (cookies, cakes, pizza).
#4: “Avoid the middle aisles at the grocery store,
where you find ‘junk’ and processed foods.”
#5: Control
portion size; use your hand as a measure.
#6: Help
patients cut 100 daily calories per visit. Focus on between-meal snacking,
portion control & satiety.
#7: Write an
exercise prescription; “Encourage patients to do any exercise they love on a
consistent basis.”
#8: Don’t
forget mental health; Depression is strongly associated with weight gain,
accompanied by carb craving.
#9: Set a start
date that is meaningful, get a partner to do it with you, and announce it to
friends and family.
#10: Don’t
leave patients alone; frequent visits, follow-up by nursing staff, and group
visits all correlate with success.
#11: Reinforce
the “healthy lifestyle” message: more fruits/veggies & exercise; less
screen time; fewer sugary drinks.
#12: Dedicate 2
min. each visit to nutrition; pick 1 specific topic to address, set a goal
& follow up. Show you care.
#13: Each
patient is unique so approach each holistically; determine which factors play a
role in individual’s weight.
#14: “Remember that your role
is to be an assistant to your patient. Do not get discouraged when they do not
take your advice to change behavior.”
This last “tip” was my favorite. The “expert” was
Christopher F. Bolling, MD, Division of General and Community Pediatrics,
Cincinnati Children’s Hospital and Medical Center. His further excellent expert
advice was as follows:
“The major lifestyle change
required for weight loss occurs when it reaches a level of importance in
someone's life and is accompanied by a level of confidence that this change can
actually be accomplished. In other words, change will happen on the patient's
timetable, not that of the healthcare provider. He encourages clinicians to
think of their role as that of a close friend who doesn't nag. ‘Be there and be
helpful when your patient is ready to act. Until then, be patient.’”
Boy, that is a clinical gem
I can relate to! That’s how it was with me. My doctor had nagged me for years. His
Registered Dietician did too, always with “bad” advice, especially
for a long-term Type 2 diabetic: Eat a restricted calorie, one-size-fits-all,
“balanced” diet, they told me. This is still the advice of the
public health establishment. And exercise more. Needless to say,
when I tried it, I failed to lose weight or keep off what weight I did lose. I
was hungry.
Then one day, 17 years ago, I weighed
myself at the Fulton Fish Market and discovered I weighed 375 pounds. It was a
rough day. Losing weight finally “reached a level of importance”
for me. A few days later, when I walked into my doctor’s office for a regular
check-up, he greeted me with, “Have I got a diet for you!” He had read Gary Taubes’s
“What If It’s All Been a Big Fat Lie,” a 2002 New York Times Sunday Magazine cover
story, tried the diet and lost 17 pounds strictly doing Very Low Carb.
He suggested I try it too, so I did, and over a few years I lost 170
pounds.
My motivation to lose weight was “accompanied by a level of
confidence that this can actually be accomplished.” Change happened on my
timetable. My doctor never had to nag me again. He just smiled when I
walked in the door.
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