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Continue How to loss weight diet chart in hindi URL of this page: If you are overweight or have obesity, losing weight can improve your health. It might also help you prevent weight-related diseases, such as heart disease, diabetes, arthritis and some cancers. A healthy diet is an important part of a weight-loss program. It May include fruits, vegetables, whole grains, and fat-free or low-fat milk and milk products May include lean meats, poultry, fish, beans, eggs and nuts Goes easy on saturated fats, trans fat, cholesterol, salt (sodium), and added sugars The key to losing weight is to burn more calories than you eat and drink. A diet can help you to do this through portion control. There are many different types of diets. Some, like the Mediterranean diet, describe a traditional way of eating from a specific region. Others, like the DASH eating plan or a diet to lower cholesterol, were designed for people who have certain health problems. But they may also help you to lose weight. There are also fad or crash diets that severely restrict calories or the types of food you are allowed to eat. They may sound promising, but they rarely lead to permanent weight loss. They also may not provide all of the nutrients your body needs. In addition to a diet, adding exercise into your daily life can help you to lose weight. NIH: National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases The information on this site should not be used as a substitute for professional medical care or advice. Contact a health care provider if you have questions about your health. If it feels like you’re constantly trying to lose weight, only to have your efforts fail, it’s time to rethink your weight loss program. An effective regimen needs to do more than help you drop pounds, it should also promote habits that you can incorporate into your lifestyle. Each person has their own individual preferences and needs when it comes to eating and dieting. Check out some of the top weight loss programs so you can find a plan that’s right for you. Photo Courtesy: Weight Watchers WW, formerly known as Weight Watchers, is a points-based program scientifically proven to help adherents change their eating behaviors. Dieters like WW because it gives them a measure of control over the foods they eat, including access to treats. Its newest program, myWW, continues the 50+ year old company’s flexible, holistic approach to food and wellness, while offering different levels of engagement from digital-only access to personalized coaching. Proponents of WW love the multiple options for weight loss support, like in-person meetings and enthusiastic online communities, as well as the one-of-a-kind Wellness Wins program that rewards members for healthy habits. Photo Courtesy: MyFitnessPal MyFitnessPal is a free app and website that offers suggested calorie and nutrient goals based on the user’s activity level and weight loss goals. Users find MyFitnessPal easy to use and appreciate all the options to customize the app to their needs, such as calculating nutrients for frequently-used recipes, synching the app with their favorite fitness tracker, or researching the macros of seemingly every food and dish in existence. Need a nudge? You can also add friends on the app for additional support. A premium ad-free upgrade boasts additional features for the truly devoted tracker. Noom is a paid weight loss program popular with dieters who want to use technology to advance their weight loss efforts. The convenience of having a single mobile app to track food and exercise, look up recipes, and receive support and weight loss counseling makes Noom a good fit for tech-savy dieters who want a comprehensive approach to losing weight--including those who aren’t Millennials (the target Noom audience). Dieters love that no food is off limits, and that the behavioral and social elements of eating are considered as part of creating healthier habits. Photo Courtesy: The Mayo Clinic Users of the Mayo Clinic Diet love that this program combines a short plan with a large initial weight loss with a long-term plan to permanently change their lifestyle. The program’s intro period boasts a lower calorie count that shocks the body into losing weight so that users are motivated to continue the plan. Program participants like that this diet encourages new habits that promote a healthy, sustainable diet. Photo Courtesy: Nutrisystem The Nutrisystem program is a hit with dieters who find themselves short on time. Your meals and snacks come prepackaged; all you need to do is heat and eat. You’ll appreciate having a controlled menu that requires minimal food prep. Users also like having the option to customize their program’s food to their tastes and dietary needs, and the fact that food is delivered right to their doorsteps. Dieters who have trouble limiting their consumption of unhealthy carbs often find success with the Atkins plan, a low carb weight loss program. Proponents of the Atkins plan state that it’s easy to follow, reduces their cravings, and eliminates the hunger often associated with dieting. Oh, and that the pounds often drop ridiculously fast on a diet that includes bacon. Fans like that you don’t have to limit your protein consumption, and that carbs are eventually reintroduced (unlike Keto which is 80% fat, forever). You can also purchase prepackaged Atkins shakes, bars, and meals that adhere to the plan. If you aren’t a fan of breakfast or if you prefer large meals, intermittent fasting is an excellent fit for your eating schedule. Intermittent fasting requires you to eat your meals during a designated 8-hour window that you select based on your schedule. Though hunger pangs are common at first, follows of intermittent fasting find that their body quickly gets used to the program’s eating window. And although some proponents also follow restrictive diets (low carb is a popular IF companion), others swear they find weight loss success eating whatever they want as long they stick to the time limit. Photo Courtesy: DASH Diet If you need to lose weight and address specific health problems, like hypertension or high cholesterol, the DASH diet can help you accomplish both of these goals. Followers of the DASH diet lower their blood pressure and bad cholesterol while raising their good cholesterol levels and their overall sense of wellness. The plan encourages a lot of vegetables, fruits, and whole grains while limiting foods high in saturated fat. Photo Courtesy: Jenny Craig The Jenny Craig weight loss program combines the popularity of prepackaged meals (plus additional fresh fruits and veggies) with the support of a one-on-one consultant. Followers of the Jenny Craig program love the accountability offered by their consultant. If you get off track or have a bad week, your consultant will help and support you so that you get back on the plan as quickly as possible. And believe it or not, many people really like the food, especially the frozen options. Photo Courtesy: Cleveland Clinic Though many dieters experience weight loss with the MIND diet, the eating plan was originally designed to decrease the age-related decline in brain health and lower your likelihood of suffering from dementia. Foods rich in antioxidants and healthy fats are encouraged, while foods high in fat or sugar are limited (think whole grains, leafy greens, berries, nuts, olive oil, fish, poultry-- classic Mediterranean fare). Followers of the MIND diet find that it’s relatively easy to make the plan’s eating guidelines a lifestyle, especially since there are no caloric restrictions and the upside (neurological vitality) is so compelling. This latest diet plan allows dieters to still enjoy some of their favorite, less healthy foods in moderation.Share on PinterestThe freshman 15.Beer gut.Middle-age spread.Hibernation handles.The monikers for dreaded weight gain are endless, but no matter what you call it, most of us have jumped on the diet merry-go-round at one time in our lives in an attempt to lose weight. Dieting is tricky business.Anyone who’s ever tried to shed pounds knows how difficult it is to give up favorite foods and stick to a diet.The word “diet” alone makes us feel deprived, which puts us on the slippery slope toward splurging on high calorie, high fat foods. So you’ll probably like the sounds of this: The 80/20 Diet is a new eating plan that gives you permission to indulge in your favorite foods as long as you eat really healthy the rest of the time. In “The 80/20 Diet,” Australian nutritionist, chef, and personal trainer Teresa Cutter writes that you can lose weight if you eat nutritiously 80 percent of the time and allow yourself to indulge in less healthy food for the remaining 20 percent of your meals. By nutritious, Cutter means whole, unprocessed or minimally processed foods, lots of fruits, vegetables, lean protein, and whole grains, plus lots of water. Her book contains over 130 recipes to help you eat healthy and lose weight. Keep in mind, however, that Cutter’s definition of less healthy foods might not square with yours.You were probably imaging toeing the line with stellar, good-for-you meals Monday through Friday and indulging on pizza and beer over the weekend. Not so fast. This diet does not give permission to binge eat. Breakfast, lunch, and dinner for a week equals 21 meals, so 80 percent would be 17 healthy meals.That leaves four indulgent opportunities, but Cutter admits that if you gorge on pizza, fries, and cheeseburgers for those four meals, you’ve just undone all the good work of the 80 percent.You can have that cheeseburger, she said, just don’t get a Whopper and double fries.“I think an 80/20 plan is a great approach,” licensed, registered dietitian Kristin Kirkpatrick told Healthline. “I’ve seen with my own patients that willpower [alone] does not work, it just makes people want the foods they are giving up even more,” she says. “Therefore, allowing yourself a few indulgences here and there may not be such a bad thing. With my patients I tend to be a bit more conservative and suggest a 90/10 split though.”Well-balanced menus built around fruit, vegetables, lean protein, and whole grains will help you feel full, and due to the fiber and water content, keep your system working. However, since weight loss is all about burning more calories than you consume, you still have to practice portion control. Talia Koren, who blogs at WorkweekLunch.com, lost 10 pounds following the 80/20 rule. “Restrictive eating rarely makes anyone truly happy because it’s extremely difficult,” Koren wrote. “Some control is good, but when you set too many rules, you eventually find yourself back at square one.”Koren followed a weekly plan, but others prefer the daily regime of two healthy meals and snacks per day and one indulgence. For Koren, prep and planning involved considerable time and effort, but she says that having nutritious food always available (she packs her lunch and does not dine out frequently) helped keep her on the 80/20 track.Another positive aspect of the 80/20 diet is that it removes the angst we often feel when we indulge in nondiet food like cupcakes, cookies, ice cream, and the like. “Losing the shame of having a favorite food every once in a while may in turn deflect an entire binge,” Kirkpatrick said.Time and money can be a negative factor in following the 80/20 diet. Since fresh food and good cuts of lean protein can be more expensive than boxed, frozen, canned, and fast food options, you may have to stretch your budget a bit.You’ll also have to be organized and able to commit time to meal prep.For instance, Koren prepares meals on Sunday and Wednesday for the following days, and makes good use of sealable plastic containers. Find out if meal prepping with plastic food containers is sabotaging your diet.Not doing the calculations correctly could also be a drawback, Kirkpatrick added. “If 20 percent turns into 40 percent and the healthy items only fall into 60 percent range, then you run into problems,” she told Healthline. “This is about small amounts of things. If starting small turns into larger portions and unhealthy foods, this is not the right plan for you.” To date, there is no science behind the 80/20 diet, but a study published in Obesity Facts in 2014 attests to the theory behind this diet. Researchers found that you can still lose weight after small splurges if you compensate and eat healthy most of the time.The study adds that even if you do not lose weight, you’ll be healthier overall and may have a lower risk for conditions such as heart disease, high blood pressure, and cancer.Diets that promise quick and painless weight loss might work initially, but they seldom hold steady in the long run. What does work are making lifestyle changes and readjusting your thinking about food. The 80/20 Diet approaches both the physical and mental aspects of weight loss, and might be a sensible, sustainable method to lose weight and stay healthy. Hate diets? Then you'll love this. Instead of counting calories or multiplying fat percentages (and tearing your hair out), try this amazingly simple weight loss concept: Look hard at your plate. Divide it into two sections; fill about half or more with vegetables and/or fruits and the remainder with roughly equal amounts of starch and a high-protein food. Then watch the weight come off. Even better, this way of eating may help prevent cancer, heart disease, and other common killers. Our reader testers dropped pounds, got fitter, and felt better after just 2 months of following this simple weight loss strategy. Now you can too.By using your plate as a weight loss tool, you no longer have to remember confusing details about diet portions and servings, says Netty Levine, RD, a nutritionist at Cedars-Sinai Medical Center in Los Angeles. That's the beauty of this divided-plate concept: built-in portion control. "You fill the divided plate once. If you're still hungry, have another plate of vegetables, and then you're done. It's that simple," says Levine. And with a plate half filled with vegetables, there's no room for the megacalorie, gigantic burgers and pasta "hills" notorious for contributing to the obesity epidemic. "Everything today is supersized, and people are confused about how much they really should eat," says Nancy Vuckovic, PhD, investigator at Kaiser Permanente Center for Health Research in Portland, OR. "The overweight people coming into my office are not eating a cheeseburger, they're eating supersized meals with giant burgers, mounds of fries, and huge sodas," says Levine. The divided plate strategy eliminates this problem, since there's simply not room for all that meat and starch when half the plate is filled with veggies and/or fruits. It brings out-of-control portions back down to size. And you're still eating enough food to feel full and satisfied.Breakfast Plate PowerYou still think in terms of fruits/veggies, starch (whole grains), and protein (milk or eggs), but they don't always fit neatly on a plate. Remember: You're still aiming for half or more of the meal to be fruits and veggies. Here are some sample meals: Fruit-topped whole grain cereal with milk and a glass of orange juice Vegetable-stuffed three-egg-white omelette with whole grain toast and fruit or juice Two whole grain waffles smothered in chopped fruit with yogurt or milk Fruit or juice with a small bran muffin and low-fat milk [pagebreak]Lunch Plate PowerThe rule remains for weight loss: At least half of your meal should be vegetables and fruits. (When using a plate, opt for a traditional 8-inch luncheon plate.) Consider bread, tortillas, potatoes, or beans as your starch (beans double up for both starch and protein). Make a pledge to always finish your veggies or fruits first. If you have room, you can finish the rest of your meal. Some sample meals: Sandwich filled with two or three slices of lean meat, poultry, a few spoonfuls of reduced-fat tuna salad, or a veggie burger patty, with a salad, fruit salad, or vegetables Black bean, lentil, or other bean-based soup with a salad or side dish of vegetables or fruits Baked potato with a cup of broccoli or other vegetable and reduced-fat cheese Large salad topped with grilled chicken/lean beef/seafood (deck-of-cards-size portion) and one or two slices of whole grain bread Burrito. One tortilla stuffed with beans and chicken with a salad or large side dish of vegetables or fruits Dinner Plate PowerYou're in luck when you've got the good ol' meat/vegetables/starch offering, but casseroles and other mixtures take some imaginative dissection. Just remember the half fruits and veggie rule, and you're good to go. Some sample meals: Traditional meat and potatoes. About half of the plate: salad or cooked vegetables; one-third to one-quarter of the plate: deck-of-cards-size fish, poultry, or lean meat; final quarter: rice, roll, polenta, or other starch Lasagna, tuna noodle casserole, or other starchy mixed dish. Make it about one-third of the plate total, no more than a cup's worth, and fill the other two-thirds with salad or vegetables. Stir-fry. Make it three-quarters vegetables and one-quarter meat, poultry, or seafood. Fill the plate three-quarters with stir-fry and one-quarter with rice. Pasta. Stretch 1 or 1 1/2 cups of pasta with an equal amount or more of vegetables. Throw in a few pieces of shrimp, chicken, or soy "meat" for protein and flavor. Sprinkle Parmesan or low-fat cottage or ricotta cheese on top. [pagebreak]Restaurant TipsThe key to weight loss here is communication with the server. Bring in a quick sketch of the ideal plate; let the waiter guide your choice. In fast-food restaurants and diners where the staff may not be helpful, order a la carte or side dishes in the proportions you want. Inquire about portion size; if it's huge, ask the waiter to split yours in half in the kitchen and refrigerate the doggy bag. Or split it with your dinner partner. Rotisserie chicken joints are easy in terms of plate division, but beware the creamed spinach and roasted potatoes, which are loaded with fat. Get the mixed vegetables or corn (unless it's creamed). There's one potential pitfall to the plate concept: piling food up too high. The rule here: Go sky-high with fruits and veggies if you like; but keep the portions of starch and protein to no more than 3/4 to 1 inch high. This plan helped Donna Rosen, a 57-year-old Cleveland homemaker with diabetes, lose 80 lb. "That plate tells me, 'You want noodles? Fine, here's how much you can have.' Without it, I'd double or triple my portions. I lose control easily, so I need something to guide me," she confesses. The plate is designed to provide 400- to 500-calorie meals, says co-inventor Kim Gorman, RD, a research dietitian and exercise physiologist at Akron City Hospital in Ohio. She says that the plate has helped her patients lose 20 to 50 lb over a 6-month period. "Most have dieted every which way including lots of fad diets, and they were ready to throw in the towel," she says. The reason this method works when diets fail, according to Gorman and Levine, is that people finally learn how to eat in a healthy way. "It's eating instead of dieting; people learn to make a balanced meal, and they can include foods they like, just not excessive amounts of them," explains Gorman.[pagebreak]Prevent Disease Too!Not only are dietitians using divided-plate plans for weight loss, but the American Institute for Cancer Research (AICR) in Washington, DC, has also been harnessing the power of plates to fight cancer! In a campaign titled "The New American Plate," the AICR has released a set of free brochures as well as a placemat you can buy showing the plate portions they recommend to stave off cancer and promote weight loss (a cancer fighter in itself). The AICR recommends portions similar to the ones described above with some slight variation. "Our rule of thumb, using a standard 9- or 10-inch dinner plate: Plant-based foods such as vegetables, fruits, whole grains, and beans should cover two-thirds or more of the plate. Meat, fish, poultry, or low-fat dairy should cover one-third or less of the plate," explains Melanie Polk, RD, director of nutrition education at AICR. These plate strategies fight disease because of all the fruits and vegetables they include, says James Shikany, DPH, assistant professor of medicine, division of preventive medicine, University of Alabama at Birmingham. "Studies of diet and disease indicate that the quarter of the population with the lowest intake of fruits and vegetables has double the rate of the most common cancers, such as colon, breast, and prostate," he says. While he's a big fan of all produce, Dr. Shikany suggests making the following staples in your diets: cruciferous vegetables such as broccoli and cabbage; spinach, kale, and other dark leafy greens; orange-fleshed fruits and vegetables such as sweet potatoes, carrots, peaches, and citrus fruits. "Each of these groups contains its own disease-fighting compounds," he explains.[pagebreak]Plate Power ToolsTry these products to help you balance and size meal portions. From the American Institute for Cancer Research (AICR): three free brochures detailing the program, with weight loss tips, recipes, and a portion wheel. A placemat with life-size drawings of vegetables, rice, and chicken on a plate is also available. Cost: brochures and wheel free; $12 for a set of four placemats. To order, call (800) 843-8114 or go to www.aicr.org. Perfect Portions Diet Dish: a translucent dish (sectioned off for various types of food) that fits into a sturdy plastic base. Comes with 10 different disks that you slip between the base and the see-through plate that offer portion tips for different meals. Includes a wallet-size card of restaurant tips. Cost: $19.99. To order, call (888) 889- 0899 or go to www.perfectportions.com. The Diet Plate: a charming, earthenware dinner plate imported from the UK. Its pattern includes a measuring tape motif delineating the various sections of the plate (vegetables, starches, meats) and even a cheese square denoting 1/2 oz. "Salad is unlimited, and if there's not room on the plate, use a side dish," recommends inventor Kay Illingworth. Cost: approx. $30, depending on exchange rate. To order, go to www.thedietplate.com or call 011-44-1457-862446. (This is an international call.) This content is created and maintained by a third party, and imported onto this page to help users provide their email addresses. 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