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Cessation of smoking with the help of diet pills
With Acomplia you can take the weight off, gradually and healthily, in addition to use the advantages of cessation of smoking.
The Brits want more acomplia
The article looks at the new guidlines issued by NICE (the National Institute for Health and Clinical Excellence) instructing UK's health providers to use acomplia in the national fight against obesity.
Hindsight is wonderful unless you're walking behind someone overweight.
The article reminds those starting to take phentermine that one of the side effects is that you can get out of breath even with mild exertion. So if you are starting physical exercise to burn off some of those calories, you should carefully monitor how your body reacts to the medication. Take time to build up tolerance. If you keep getting out of breath, consult your doctor.
Walkers of the world unite, you have nothing to lose but your pounds.
The writer accepts the universal truth that an overweight person exercising in public may be mocked. But she asks what is more important. That overweight people lose weight through walking or are intimidated into doing nothing.
She's under starter's orders.
The articles describes how you should start an exercise program gently and only slowly build up to more serious bursts of effort. In conjunction with diet and weight loss medication, exercise can speed up the loss of those pounds.
Only one more day to go.
The article challenges a reader who is also dieting to decide whether to give anything else up for Lent. So often, we have the best intentions when we start a diet, but so many fall by the wayside and put the weight back on. So few are strong enough to lose weight and keep it off without medication.
My grandmother knew what she was talking about.
The article attacks the food industry for manufacturing stuff to eat when the natural foods our grandparents ate are the more healthy choices. The writer pays a little more for fresh food and eats less.
What do my teeth have to do with this?
The article revisits the warning that weight-loss medications should only be used when there are clear medical benefits to counterbalance the risks. The writer explains the health problems she had when she started taking phentermine, but also confirms that her blood pressure fell without having to take any specific medications.
Something more than nostalgia.
The writer tells us that it's all right to break a diet sometimes. We all need a little celebration and the support of our loved ones to keep us going when the going gets tough.
Why am I doing this?
The writer thinks about why people do want to lose weight. For some, it will be cosmetic, so they can get back their good looks. For others, it will be fear. She's doing it for love.
That friend-of-a-friend.
The article reminds you that phentermine needs to be treated with respect. Taking medications helps you lose weight but, in the end, it's up to you to have the confidence to keep the diet and exercise routines going.
Accused!
The writer has an attack of conscience and warns people that they should not take phentermine when they are outside the normal range of thyroid function. She also repeats the warning not to mix the prescription weight loss medications and reminds people that it is best to take the medication on an empty stomach first thing in the morning.
Back in the Stone Age when times were good.
The article describes how the human body is designed to store carbohydrates as fat so that, in times of famine, we can survive longer without starving. The body does not shed the fat in times of plenty. The writer therefore argues that a net-loss calorie diet makes the body think there is a famine and triggers the burning of the fat.
The Cut down on sugar Rule.
The writer explains that consuming less sugar in what we eat and drink is a lifetime commitment. She advises everyone to check the labels in shops and buy unsweetened products, or cook using natural ingredients so that you can monitor exactly how much sugar you are using.
Switch to smaller plates.
The article describes the latest series of research studies showing that people who are served food on bigger plates eat more. People also continue to eat so long as they see others still eating. It therefore offers tips on giving people smaller plates and timing meals so that everyone starts and finishes eating at more or less the same time.
Your eyes are as big as your stomach.
The article describes the body's system for controlling appetite and explains why there can be a delay between starting to eat and your stomach signally that you are full. Because of this delay, it advises on how best to monitor how much you eat so that you can stop and not overeat.
That first step.
The writer talks about how to lose weight and then keep it off by eating smaller portions and cutting down on sugar. She is clear that the appetite suppressant medications only work if there are lifestyle and lifetime changes.
The bubble.
The writer describes how she had lived her life surrounded by people who had given up challenging her overeating. Only when she admitted the need to change did she then begin to hear the support her family and friends had been offering all along. They did not want to lose her to an early grave and she decided to take action.
So how did I start?
The writer describes how she and her doctor discussed which weight loss medication she should take, and then how she researched the best way to diet. Her conclusion is that only slow and gentle changes to lifestyle and diet are appropriate.
My motivation to tackle the weight problem.
The writer describes how she was forced to admit her own weight problem. It might not have been on the way to Damascus, but it was just as sure a conversion to the need to take action to get some of her weight down.
Those lawmakers have a case to answer.
The article highlights the sad fact that there is increasing discrimination against those who are considered overweight. The law offers protection to those who have long term physical disabilities, but the courts have been taking the view that whether people are overweight is under their own control and so not a disability. It is a self-imposed incapacity.
Women and the health benefits of weight loss.
The article acknowledges that some women are currently proud of their weight. While that is their choice, it questions whether they should not take more notice of the risks of diabetes, not only as a threat to their own health, but also to any babies should they become pregnant.
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