Thursday, December 13, 2012

Making Weight Loss Fitness Fun

Looking for the perfect workout during weight loss in Chandler and Scottsdale? Try something new!

Both before and after your medical weight loss program, regular exercise will be a crucial part of maintaining a healthy lifestyle. Though you should stick to any guidelines provided by Dr. Primack and Dr. Ziltzer, a minimum of 30 minutes of physical activity per day is typically recommended for all adults. Exercise will help you lose weight, but it will also help your body by:

Toning musclesIncreasing energyBoosting metabolismLowering blood pressureLowering risk of heart diseaseTightening loose skin caused by weight loss

As you build up your strength during weight loss in Chandler and Scottsdale, low-impact exercises may be the best to start with. For a while, this may amount to simple daily exercises and regular walking or swimming, but you may find that you tire quickly of the same old routines. Don’t worry

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The Treatment of Overweight and Obesity as Chronic Medical Conditions

To begin our discussion, let’s discuss the current thinking about overweight and obesity. Physicians and scientists now believe that overweight should be considered a chronic medical condition. Practically, this means that we should consider treating our weight like we would consider treating ourselves if we had high blood pressure.

For example, if you found out you have high blood pressure, most people would first go to see their primary care physician. The primary care physician would check your blood pressure and likely start out by asking you to do a few things on your own to help the blood pressure like cut out salt and decrease alcohol use. At your next visit, if the blood pressure was still high, your physician would likely prescribe medical therapy for your blood pressure in the form of a high blood pressure pill. At your follow up visit , if your blood pressure is well controlled, your physician would refill your medicine and arrange the for future monitoring. If after several adjustments in medication your blood pressure is not within normal limits or if your blood pressure is severely elevated which can lead to organ damage, your physician would then refer you to another physician, likely a nephrologist, a specialist in blood pressure control. Your blood pressure specialist will use tools and medications that your primary care does not use everyday as the nephrologist has more experience with hard to treat blood pressure. If at any time, you were decide to stop treatment with your blood pressure medicine or to have a really salty meal, it is no doubt that your blood pressure would go up again.

Let’s use weight in the same example as blood pressure. When you first seek treatment for overweight or obesity, the first person to visit is your primary physician. Your physician may recommend a particular diet and exercise regimen. Like easily controlled blood pressure, this may be all you need. If your weight does not respond adequately (your loss is not enough) or if the diet is too hard to follow or you have been on it prior and had weight regain or you have multiple medical conditions that your current weight is worsening like diabetes, high blood pressure or sleep apnea your physician should send you to a specialist in weight loss called a medical obesity specialist (see www.ASBP.org or www.ABOM.com). This physician is well trained in comprehensive medical weight loss and will use techniques not well studied or known to your primary care physician.

To treat our weight any other way than as a chronic disease (like blood pressure) would be to go against current medical and scientific thinking. Aggressive low calorie diets, exercise, behavioral modification and medical oversight including various weight loss medications are the current best known way to lose weight, and give you the best known way to keep it off. When you are successful in using dietary change, weight loss medicines, exercise and behavioral methods to lose weight, if you stop dieting, taking your weight loss medication or exercising, it is likely that you will regain your weight.

It is unfortunate that at this time we do not have a true cure for obesity. Medical science is continuing the pursuit for a cure. Until a cure is found, we will have to use comprehensive approaches to lose weight and continue these treatments for long periods of time to prevent regain.

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9989 N. 95th St.
Scottsdale, AZ 85258
(480) 366-4400
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600 South Dobson Rd.
Chandler, AZ 85224
(480) 265-9099
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At Scottsdale Weight Loss Center, we provide medical weight loss programs to residents of Arizona, including Phoenix, Glendale, Chandler and Scottsdale.

Copyright © 2012 Scottsdale Weight Loss

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Buddy Up for Weight Loss Workouts

Posted: Oct 26 in Our Blog tagged Support Systems by Staff TweetWhy an exercise partner can be so valuable during weight loss in Chandler and Scottsdale



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Making Weight Loss SMART

Posted: Nov 05 in Our Blog tagged Goal Setting by Staff TweetThe best time to be a smarty pants is when you’re in that old pair of jeans. It all starts with making healthy weight loss goals in Chandler and Scottsdale.



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Dan: 90 lbs Weight Loss

Q and A session with Dan Smith, November’s Patient of the Month who recently shed 90 lbs.

SWLC staff: What made you decide to make a change?

Dan: It was over Christmas in 2010 when I was visiting my family. I was catching up with my sister Christmas Eve night and was taken back at how great she looked! So I asked,

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Spike in Obesity

Dr. Craig Primack weighs in on the recent article written by Cronkite News out of Washington, regarding the that could end up costing billions in added healthcare costs.

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Craig Primack, a specialist in obesity medicine at Scottsdale Weight Loss Center, said it’s hard to project out 20 years into the future, but he believes the number in the trust report is on the right track. As a society, he said, we are not done gaining weight.



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Twittering to Be Thin

Posted: Nov 15 in Our Blog tagged Support Systems by Staff TweetThat’s nothing to LOL about. In Scottsdale and Chandler, weight loss is in closer reach with help from your

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Discomfort Food: Avoiding Emotional Eating

During weight loss in Chandler or Scottsdale, prevent overeating by controlling emotional hunger

Hunger isn’t the only thing that causes us to eat. On bad days, when responsibilities seem to pile up without reprieve, our emotions can get the better of us. When we feel anxious, depressed or even bored, it can weaken our resolve to stick with healthy habits, leading to an unfortunate bout of overeating.

As you lose weight in Chandler or Scottsdale, you’ll learn how to change many aspects of your lifestyle. You’ll begin exercising and eating a more nutritious diet under your weight loss doctor’s supervision. Emotional eating is a common problem during weight loss, but is just one more unhealthy habit you can learn to break during your program.

Though emotional eating can make you feel helpless against your emotions, you can find ways to keep it from sabotaging your diet. Because emotional eating is often an unconscious reaction to stress or negative emotions, the first step in breaking this habit is to recognize the difference between emotional eating and genuine, physical hunger.

Emotional hunger will:

Come on suddenly. Physical hunger develops slowly and will never take the form of a sudden craving. Emotional hunger will make you feel like you need to eat the food you crave immediately, while true hunger feels less urgent.Crave a particular food. When we’re truly hungry, our minds are open to possibilities; when we’re emotionally hungry, we tend to seek solace in specific unhealthy comfort foods.Make us eat beyond fullness. Even when we feel full, emotional hunger can cause us to keep eating.Make us feel guilty. You shouldn’t ever regret a healthy meal, but will likely look back on emotional eating choices with regret.

For each of us, there are certain situations that are guaranteed to set us off. One of the best ways to keep emotional hunger at bay is to recognize when it’s most likely to appear. If you notice the signs of emotional hunger above, take a minute to think about what may have been the trigger. By identifying the situations most likely to cause you to eat emotionally, you can stay careful during potentially problematic times.

When you begin feeling emotional hunger or enter a situation likely to trigger it, take control of the situation by:

Diverting your attention. Get your mind off everything that has to do with food. Get out of the kitchen and go for a walk, read a book or call a friend. Do something productive or engaging that will take your mind completely off your cravings. You can even make a list of alternate activities and consult it any time you feel an emotional eating urge.Eating something healthy. Though

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Joann: 35 lbs Weight Loss

I am healthier, physically and mentally stronger and happier than I imagined. I do not regard my weight loss as ending. It is the beginning of a new me that I to have maintain on an ongoing basis.

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Healthy Habits Make Healthy Weight Loss

The scale isn’t the only thing that will change as you lose weight in Chandler and Scottsdale

There is a reason losing weight is so hard to do. Once you establish unhealthy habits, changing them is difficult

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