The News Review:
- Edmonds surgeons on cutting edge of weight loss
- Why New Year’s Weight Loss Resolutions Fail and the 4 Keys To …
- Good weight-loss guides steer clear of gimmicks Treating body and …
- ‘Project Health’ offers new approach to weight loss
- Good Reasons to Avoid Diet Coke Plus Weight-Loss Supplements
- Want New Year’s resolution inspiration? ne man’s weight-loss …
Edmonds surgeons on cutting edge of weight loss
Snohomish County Business WA
Like many overweight people at one point in her quest to lose weight Schmidt had lost 90 pounds. She put 70 of those pounds back on. But two years after having a new weight loss surgery and shedding 84 pounds Schmidt is happy to try skiing for the first time this year. At 240 pounds and 44-years-old on ct. 7 2007 Schmidt became the first recipient in Washington of sleeve surgery a procedure that takes a patient’s stomach from being the size of a small pineapple or gourd to a banana. Schmidt’s surgery took place at Puget Sound Surgical Center in Edmonds where surgeons Peter Billing and Robert Landerholm have provided the little known operation at their clinic to almost 100 patients. “People think you are putting some kind of device or sleeve in” Billing said.
Related from Asportforumblog: eSpor Launches Cutting-Edge Software for Sports Organizations
Why New Year’s Weight Loss Resolutions Fail and the 4 Keys To …
PR Web (press release) WA
More remarkable Gallagher achieves his spectacular weight loss success stories "remotely" without even meeting his clients face-to-face. Stupidity (or insanity) is proverbially defined as doing the same thing over and over and expecting different results. Nowhere is this hackneyed adage more accurate than in the crazed world of New Year's fitness resolutions. It is only natural that so many individuals feel compelled to make a resolute resolution to improve upon their current fitness state-of-being.
Good weight-loss guides steer clear of gimmicks Treating body and …
Barre Montpelier Times Argus VT
My mailbox gives it away loaded as it is with review copies of new and reissued diet books. Publishers consider January the ideal time for these works figuring that many already overweight Americans will have added more inches and pounds since Thanksgiving and will resolve once more to shed them when they usher in the new year. But I’m happy to say there has been a tremendous improvement in recent years in the crop of weight loss guides. Most have been written by research scientists who avoid gimmicks and boring overly restrictive or quick weight-loss schemes that are bound to fail. Instead their recommendations are based on sound studies and clinical trials that have yielded a better understanding of what prompts us to eat more calories than we need and in particular more calories from the wrong kinds of foods. These authors are not miracle workers who can get you bikini-ready for a midwinter vacation but their approaches can work wonders for those determined to lose weight permanently even with limits on time or budget or with a social or occupational need to dine out often. Science-based improvements in the diet-book genre began about five years ago with the publication of “The Volumetrics Weight-Control Plan: Feel Full on Fewer Calories” by Barbara J.
‘Project Health’ offers new approach to weight loss
The Southern IL
JAEHNIG SIUC University Communications Sunday December 28 2008 1:14 AM CST CARBNDALE — In a tug of war with food you can win by letting go of the rope. This paradox lies at the heart of a new weight-loss program developed at Southern Illinois University Carbondale. Researchers there say focusing on living a life that’s personally meaningful works better than an emphasis on shedding pounds when it comes to helping people lose weight. “We wanted to change (the participants’) psychological wellbeing with the hope that that change would spill over to other aspects of their lives including their eating and exercise habits” says Professor Mark R. Dixon who heads the behavior analysis program in the College of Education and Human Services’ Rehabilitation Institute. The institute is one of SIUC’s signature programs.
Good Reasons to Avoid Diet Coke Plus Weight-Loss Supplements
U.S. News & World Report DC
f course Coke Zero Plus would be a complete oxymoron. Dangerous Diet SupplementsWomen also need a reality check when it comes to purchasing oh-so-great-sounding weight-loss products with names like Fatloss Slimming and Extrim Plus. n Monday the FDA announced that.
Want New Year’s resolution inspiration? ne man’s weight-loss …
Trading Markets (press release) CA
launched a weight-loss competition. He dropped 50 pounds from his 5-foot 7-inch frame in three months and won. He needed the cash prize to hire a good divorce lawyer.