Search Weight Loss Topics:




Mar 31

Don’t Get Duped by Health Fraud! Avoid These Red Flags – The Great Courses Daily News

By Roberta H. Anding, M.S., Baylor College of Medicine and Texas Childrens HospitalEdited by Kate Findley, The Great Courses DailyPhoto by Rawpixel.com / ShutterstockHealth Fraud and Weight Loss

The sources that we use to educate ourselves on nutrition are rife with misinformation, especially on the internet. By looking out for the red flags, though, you can avoid becoming a victim of health fraud.

One area where misinformation is particularly prevalent is the weight loss industry. Even when a product or practice does lead to weight loss, you must ask yourself whether its sustainable and benefits your long-term health.

Ive had patients coming in who want to cleanse their colon, Professor Anding said. Now, if you think about colon cleansing, you would think that makes sense. But Mother Nature has done a wonderful job in terms of giving us a recipe for colon cleansing, and its called fiber.

There is no 20 pounds of waste product that accumulates on the inside of your intestinal wall. There is no reason to purify and detoxify yourself. But literally, over and over again, I see people coming in with colon cleansing.

Most of these programs are forcing diarrhea as a way of helping people lose weight. If you have diarrhea, its mostly water weight. So the number on the scale may go down, but youre not losing body fat.

When it comes to evaluating nutrition information, how do you separate fact from fiction? One phrase to watch out for is all natural.

Whats our alternative? All synthetic? All fake? We dont like those words, so all natural gives us this illusion of waving grains of wheat, and we translate that to safe.

However, some things from nature arent safe at all, such as heroin, cocaine, and tobacco. Imagine if cigarette manufacturers put waving fields of tobacco on their product to try and sell this as an all-natural product. All natural is not synonymous with safe.

I had a patient who came into my clinic, and she had been reading on the internet that prozac antidepressant medication has a black box warning, which suggests theres some side effects associated with it, so she didnt want to use that evil pharmaceutical, Professor Anding said.

What she wanted to use was a homeopathic version of an antidepressant. We actually looked up the herb she was taking, and the herb contained strychnine.So she was, every single day, supplementing herself with a poison.

Understandably, the woman was trying to protect her health, and she was concerned, as many people are, about the side effects of medications such as prozac.

[For] individuals who are trying to find alternative information, as a registered dietician, I always look at that as a gift, Professor Anding said. Now I have people who are interested in making a change, but they need some guidance along that path to optimal wellness.

By learning how to separate fact from fiction, you can avoid consumer health fraud.

Information from the Food and Drug Administration highlights the red flags of health fraud. When you hear any of these claims being made, you need to have your antenna up and say, Is this helpful information or hype?

1. Is it a quick and effective cure-all? For example, if an advertisement for a new health product states that you dont have to diet or exercise, you can assume that its probably not reasonable.

2. Can it treat a serious or incurable disease? A product you can buy from a consumer magazine or the internet that claims to treat a major disease is separating you from treatment that may be lifesaving, or at least life-sustaining.

3. Is the ad claiming to have some miraculous breakthrough, secret formula, or the hidden ingredient that your doctor doesnt want you to know about? Think about this one for a second. What theyre trying to do is separate you from reliable sources of information.

4. Does the ad feature fancy-sounding medical terminology such as thermogetic setpoint or lipoactive? It all sounds impressive, but when you further research this medical terminology, it doesnt existanother red flag.

5. Beware of personal testimonies, even if they are from physicians claiming amazing results. The celebrities or experts promoting these products may not even take the products themselves; they are incentivized by generous endorsement deals.

Certainly youve seen before-and-after pictures where someone will claim they got amazing results from a product. Well, were all smart enough to know that with Adobe Photoshop and other technologies that we can use to alter photos, just because we see it in print doesnt necessarily mean it reflects reality.

6. Some companies use urgency: Limited availability. Act now. These products are in short supply.

Track these commercials. If this limited availability ad comes back over and over again for the same product, obviously they must be making more products.

In short, addressing any major condition, whether its cancer, cardiovascular disease, or obesity, requires some effort. If you want to lose 100 pounds, you are going to be hungry, you must exercise, and you must make behavioral choices every single day. Exercise and diet actually work, so thats why they dont end up on this list of health fraud examples.

Professor Roberta H. Anding is a registered dietitian and Director of Sports Nutrition and a clinical dietitian at Baylor College of Medicine and Texas Childrens Hospital. She also teaches and lectures in the Baylor College of Medicines Department of Pediatrics, Section of Adolescent Medicine and Sports Medicine, and in the Department of Kinesiology at Rice University. In addition, she is a registered dietitian with the American Dietetic Association and a dietitian for the Houston Texans NFL franchise.

Read the original:
Don't Get Duped by Health Fraud! Avoid These Red Flags - The Great Courses Daily News

Related Posts

    Your Full Name

    Your Email

    Your Phone Number

    Select your age (30+ only)

    Select Your US State

    Program Choice

    Confirm over 30 years old

    Yes

    Confirm that you resident in USA

    Yes

    This is a Serious Inquiry

    Yes

    Message:



    matomo tracker