Weight Loss Programs and Pills: Is Your Weight Loss Program Safe
and Effective?
In this age being ignorant is like committing a crime. With so
much of knowledge around you, following a trend blindly doesn't
confirm the fact that you are intelligent. But the catch here
is, GO BY RIGHT KNOWLEDGE. No doubt, internet is flooded with
the wrong knowledge and myths that leads you nowhere, but it
isn't hard enough to figure out the pearl in the ocean. Every
now and then, we see some supplements or pills making tall
claims which they down the line do not seem to validate. We will
soon establish as we go on reading this article that there is
absolutely no substitute for eating healthy and sweating out.
In US, where weight loss has been a part of national
consciousness for three decades, several studies have been done
to evaluate the effectiveness of various weight loss aids. The
major reason why most of these aids escape regulation is because
they are branded as "food supplements" to escape the Drugs and
Cosmetics Act that regulates the sale of medicine. Here are some
findings:-
1) Diet or Slimming Patches: Considered one of the most popular
way to lose weight, it claims to speed up your metabolism by
wearing a slimming patch on your skin. It then breaks down the
fatty tissues. Studies says these patches are neither effective
NOR SAFE. The US Food and Drug Administration(FDA) eventually
seized millions of these products from manufacture last year
because they had terrible side effects.
2) Green Tea Extracts: You have pills under this category which
contain polyphenols. Polyphenols are extracted from green tea
and are thought to be strong antioxidants. These pills failed to
prove their effectiveness too. It is advisable to consult your
doctor if you are taking aspirin or blood thinning medications
and you plan to take some green tea extracts because they may
interfere with blood clotting.
3) Diet Pills with Ephedra: These pills have been banned in US
but they are still available on internet. These pills are
central nervous system stimulant that suppresses appetite.
Generally, manufactures mix ephedra and caffeine which further
increases the risk of high blood pressure.
4) Diet Pills with PPA: PPA stands for phenylpropanolamine.
These pills suppress appetite. They come along with diet plan.
Manufactures of drugs and supplements containing PPA voluntarily
withdrew their products from market after it was found that
these products were associated with strokes.
5) Fat Blockers: Another popular form of weight loss aids which
bit the dust is fat blockers. It also made tall claims that it
will absorb fats from the food you eat and flush it out. A
university of California study found that chitosan (the
fat-binding component of fat blockers) has absolutely no ability
to absorb fats from the food.
---> To learn more about other fake weight loss programs and
pills and how to differentiate between genuine weight loss
programs and fake weight loss programs, visit
http://www.weightloss-health.com/Fake%20Weight%20Loss.htm