Obesity is not our preferred healthy state, but it is an all too natural state. With the advent of the grocery store and the access to quick, tasty, high calorie density foods it is hard to avoid this natural state. Our bodies keep doing what they were programed to do for thousands of years. Store calories as a hedge against the coming famine. The only problem is the famine never comes. The path to reversing your obesity and regaining your health is the food you eat. Switching to a whole food, plant-based, no oil diet is a tried and true method for both reversing obesity and regaining your health.
I am willing to give it a try, but I've never been able to stick with a diet. First thing to understand is that this is not a diet. You will not simply eat this way to lose weight then revert to the crap you used to eat.
Your job in the beginning is to educate yourself as you transition to a whole food, plant based, no oil diet.
This is a whole new way of eating. When you switch to eating a whole food, plant based, no oil diet you may feel starved. This is because when you eat whole plant foods you have to eat more food just to maintain the same calories you were eating previous. The rule of thumb to begin with is if you are hungry, eat something.
You should not be hungry on this lifestyle.
Rule 1, Knowledge is power. If you haven't done so yet I recommend going to the Get Started page and reviewing the Food Poisoning: How to Cure It by Eating Beans, Corn, Pasta, Potatoes, Rice, etc. color picture book. Then review the video lectures on that page.
The Education Begins
How do we classify people as obese in the USA. The general definition is if you have a Body Mass Index (BMI) of 30 or higher you are obese. From 25-29.99 you are considered overweight. Generally speaking BMI for individuals isn't the most precise tool, but on a population level it hits the nail on the head much more often than not.
And as you can see by the chart as a general rule as your BMI increases so does your risk of death. Understand that a BMI too low is also associated with and increased risk of death. Looking at the chart it appears that a BMI of 24 for a woman and about 23 for a man might be the optimum BMI level.
Obesity as a disease:
Below are some articles and videos covering plant based eating and obesity. Since 2013 in the USA obesity has been classified as a disease. Trust me when I say the typical chronic disease management by our healthcare system does little to actually treat the root cause of the disease. People being managed for a chronic diseases can look forward to drugs, surgery and a slow steady decline in their health due to the disease. The good news is we all have the ability to take control of our health through changing the food that we eat.
Practical Advice/Science for Weight Loss
The Calorie Density Approach to Nutrition and Lifelong Weight Management
McDougall Maximum Weight Loss Plan
Can You Really Eat As Much As You Want?
Not Losing Weight on a Plant-Based (Vegan) Diet? Here's Why (How to Lose Weight)
In Just One Year, From Almost Morbidly Obese to Happy, Healthy, and Fit!
How I Lost 225 Pounds, Ditched My Meds, and Reclaimed My Life
From Fat Vegan to Skinny Bitch
Nutritionfacts.org Articles and Videos on Obesity
What’s Driving America’s Obesity Problem?
Nutritionfacts.org Topic Summary: Obesity
Diet vs. Exercise for Weight Loss
Can Morbid Obesity be Reversed through Diet?
How to Avoid the Obesity-Related Plastic Chemical BPA
How Much Exercise to Sustain Weight Loss?
Chicken Big: Poultry & Obesity
The Spillover Effect Links Obesity to Diabetes
The Science of Obesity
Morbid Obesity Solution: A Long-Term Plant-Based Case Study
The End of Dieting, How to Prevent Disease and Maintain an Optimal Weight Without Dieting
Plant-Based Diet Best for Heart Disease and Obesity
Plant-Based Diets Show More Weight Loss Without Emphasizing Caloric Restriction
Plant-based wholefood diet almost halves the risk of obesity
Beyond Meatless, the Health Effects of Vegan Diets: Findings from the Adventist Cohorts
Adopting a vegetarian diet causes weight loss, even in the absence of exercise or calorie counting, according to a new meta-analysis published as an online advance in the Journal of the Academy of Nutrition and Dietetics on Thursday, Jan. 22, 2015.
The mega-review analyzed 15 studies, conducted with 755 participants in Finland, Norway, Poland, Spain, Sweden, and the United States. The studies varied in length, from as short as four weeks to as long as two years, with an average weight loss of 10 pounds over a 44-week period.
“The take-home message is that a plant-based diet can help you lose weight without counting calories and without ramping up your exercise routine,” says Neal Barnard, M.D., lead author of the study, president of the Physicians Committee, and an adjunct associate professor of medicine at the George Washington University School of Medicine and Health Sciences. “We hope health care providers will take note and prescribe this approach to patients looking to manage their weight and health.”
One of the secrets behind losing weight on a plant-based diet is to fill up with fiber. The Physicians Committee recommends consuming close to 40 grams of fiber a day, which is easy to do when you move vegetables, fruits, whole grains, and legumes to the center of your plate.
More than 1.4 billion adults worldwide are overweight and at increased risk for type 2 diabetes, heart disease, osteoarthritis, and certain forms of cancer.
“If you’re overweight, losing just 5 to 10 percent of your body weight can slash the risk of both type 2 diabetes and cardiovascular disease,” says Susan Levin, M.S., R.D., C.S.S.D., a study author and director of nutrition education for the Physicians Committee. “As the weight comes off, you’ll start to see blood pressure, blood sugar, triglycerides, and cholesterol fall right along with it.”
Of the many ways to lose weight, one stands out as by far the most healthful. When you build your meals from a generous array of vegetables, fruits, whole grains, and beans—that is, healthy vegetarian choices—weight loss is remarkably easy. And along with it come major improvements in cholesterol, blood pressure, blood sugar, and many other aspects of health. The message is simple: Cut out the foods that are high in fat and devoid of fiber, and increase the foods that are low in fat and full of fiber. This low-fat, vegan diet approach is safe and easy—once you get the hang of it.
Read the rest of this very informative article with meal plans and tips galore.
Click here to download "A Guide to Healthy Weight Loss" as a PDF and access three-week meal plans, recipes, and resources for health care providers.
Let's start with the basics. Knowledge is power and a practical starting point in your transition might be to understand Calorie Density and why you will most likely find the need to eat much more food on a whole food, plant based, no oil diet. Even so you will find that if you stick to these principles you will steadily lose weight. The lecture featured here by Jeff Novick is outstanding and allows you to get a firm grasp of how this way of eating works.
Here is an excerpt from an article published online, The Calorie Density Approach to Nutrition and Lifelong Weight Management by Jeff Novick
Hunger & Satiety. Whenever hungry, eat until you are comfortably full. Don’t starve and don’t stuff yourself.
Sequence Your Meals. Start all meals with a salad, soup, and/or fruit.
Don’t Drink Your Calories. Avoid liquid calories. Eat/chew your calories, don’t drink or liquefy them. Liquids have little if any satiety so they do not fill you up as much as solid foods of equal calories.
Dilution is the Solution: Dilute Out High Calorie Dense Foods/Meals. Dilute the calorie density of your meals by filling 1/2 your plate (by visual volume) with intact whole grains, starchy vegetables, and/or legumes and the other half with vegetables and/or fruit.
Be Aware of the Impact of Vegetables vs. Fat/Oil. Vegetables are the lowest in calorie density while fat and oil are the highest. Therefore, adding vegetables to any dish will always lower the overall calorie density of a meal, while adding fat and oil will always raise the overall calorie density of a meal.
Limit High Calorie Dense Foods. Limit (or avoid) foods that are higher in calorie density (dried fruit; high fat plant foods; processed whole grains; etc). If you use them, incorporate them into meals that are made up of low calorie dense foods and think of them as a condiment to the meal. For example, add a few slices of avocado to a large salad, or add a few walnuts or raisins to a bowl of oatmeal and fruit.
How to Buy Food by Jeff Novick, M.S., R.D.
How to Lose Weight Without Losing Your Mind
by Doug Lisle, Ph.D.
The One Key Concept in Making Food Choices
Stop Guilt from Stopping You
Fix Your Environment and You Fix Yourself
In this lecture, Dr. Doug Lisle explains how to achieve weight loss success. Drawn from his work with thousands of patients, Dr. Lisle unveils the surprising – and inspiring- truth about how to reach your goals. Whether your goal is to lose weight or some other personal achievement, the ideas in Losing Weight Without Losing Your Mind can be an invaluable aid in helping you to get what you really want.
Chef Aj is a vegan chef based in California who’s been on the speaking circuit for a long time. She’s made many appearances on major television shows over the years, and has written multiple recipe books.
She gave this very personal lecture at one of Dr. McDougall's Advanced Study Weekend seminars.
In this lecture she told the audience about her history of food addiction and eating disorders and how she overcame them. She also shared her unique journey trying to lose weight on a vegan diet. It is this unique journey that I found so fascinating. Each time she was challenged to change something in her diet she was pleasantly surprised at the results.
(Synopsis adapted from this article covering the video.)
This fully cited article was published in the Journal of Geriatric Cardiology, May 2017 and thoroughly covers the current state of science in regards to obesity and a plant-based diet.
Below is the body of the article. The full article including footnotes and references can be found here.
Gabrielle Turner-McGrievy, Trisha Mandes, and Anthony Crimarco
Author information ► Article notes ► Copyright and License information ►
The goal of this paper is to review the evidence related to the effect of plant-based dietary patterns on obesity and weight loss, including both observational and intervention trials. Literature from plant-based diets (PBDs) epidemiological and clinical trial research was used to inform this review. In addition, data on dietary quality, adherence, and acceptability were evaluated and are presented. Both clinical trials and observational research indicate an advantage to adoption of PBDs for preventing overweight and obesity and promoting weight loss. PBDs may also confer higher levels of diet quality than are observed with other therapeutic diet approaches, with similar levels of adherence and acceptability. Future studies should utilize health behavior theory to inform intervention development and delivery of PBDs studies and new technologies to bring interventions to scale for greater public health impact. Research examining PBDs and weight loss is also needed with more diverse populations, including older adults. Based on the available evidence, PBDs should be considered a viable option for the treatment and prevention of overweight and obesity.
More than two-thirds (69%) of U.S. adults are overweight or obese [body mass index (BMI) > 25 kg/m2].[1] Overweight and obesity are associated with a number of chronic diseases, including type 2 diabetes,[2] metabolic syndrome,[3] hypertension,[4],[5] and cardiovascular disease (CVD).[4],[5] Even modest weight loss—5% decrease in body weight—has been shown to lower the risk of chronic disease.[6],[7] Diets used in traditional, behavioral weight loss interventions have primarily focused on energy restriction to promote reductions in body weight.[8] There is also a growing body of literature examining the use of plant-based diets (PBDs) for weight loss.[9],[10]
PBDs, including vegan and vegetarian diets, are based around fruits, vegetables, grains, and legumes, with vegetarian diets also typically including dairy products and eggs. This review includes both vegetarian and vegan diets under the umbrella term of PBDs. Definitions of the various diets described in this review, along with sample dinner plans, are included in Table 1. The goal of this paper is to summarize the evidence related to the effect of plant-based dietary patterns on obesity and weight loss, including the literature from both observational and intervention trials. This article also discusses issues around adherence and acceptability, use of theory to promote behavior change, need for innovative delivery methods in PBDs intervention work, and issues relevant to an older (e.g., ages 65 and older) population.
Table 1. Definitions of diet terms and example meals.
Several epidemiological studies have examined differences in body weight based on dietary patterns. These patterns include vegan, vegetarian (veg), pesco-vegetarian (pesco-veg), semi-vegetarian (semi-veg), or omnivorous (omni) diets.[11] Data from the Adventist Health Study (AHS) have shown that BMI increases as the amount of animal foods in the diet increases, such that vegans had the lowest BMI, followed by veg, pesco-veg, semi-veg, and omni diets.[11] Moreover, findings from the European Prospective Investigation into Cancer and Nutrition (EPIC-Oxford) study, have shown that vegans gain significantly less weight as they age compared to omnivores.[12] Converting to a more plant-based diet also appears to be protective against weight gain, as does following a pesco-veg diet for women.[12] The EPIC-PANACEA study, an off-shoot of the EPIC-Oxford study, found a positive association between total meat consumption and weight gain, even after adjusting for energy intake: an increase in 250 g/day of meat led to a 2 kg weight gain after 5 years (95% CI: 1.5–2.7 kg).[13]
Along with the findings from the two large AHS and EPIC studies, the Swedish Mammography Cohort found that omnivores had the highest prevalence of overweight and obesity compared to individuals following dietary patterns with less meat.[14] In a study examining a cohort of 49,098 Taiwanese adults, the percentage of participants with a BMI ≥ 27 kg/m2 was significantly lower among those following a vegetarian diet (10.9%) as compared to those following a non-vegetarian diet (15.4%). Additionally, this study also found that for every year on a vegan diet, the risk of obesity decreased by 7% (95% CI: 0.88–0.99).[15]
Two recent meta-analyses of clinical trials assessing PBDs and weight loss found significant weight loss among participants prescribed a PBDs.[9],[10] Barnard, et al.,[9] reviewed 15 clinical trials that used PBDs for at least four weeks without energy intake restrictions. The researchers found that PBDs were associated with a mean weight loss of −3.4 kg in an intention-to-treat analysis and 4.6 kg in a completers-only analysis.[9] Their study also found that the participants' age and gender were significantly associated with weight change. Older age was associated with greater weight change in the completer analysis. Studies with a smaller proportion of female participants were also associated with greater weight change in both the intention-to-treat and completer analysis.[9]
Huang, et al.'s meta-analysis of clinical trials also indicated significant weight loss among individuals assigned to a PBDs.[10] Among the 12 studies reviewed, participants randomized to some type of vegetarian diet lost an average of −2.02 kg more than the participants assigned a non-vegetarian diet.[10] Six of the 12 studies involved energy restriction; unsurprisingly, the average weight loss was greater among the energy-restricted vegetarian diets than non-energy restricted vegetarian diets (mean of −2.2 kg vs. −1.6 kg, respectively).[10] Subgroup analyses indicated that participants in a vegan diet condition lost more weight than participants in a vegetarian diet condition (mean of −2.5 kg vs. −1.5 kg, respectively).[10] Additional clinical trials examining the use of PBDs for weight loss have been published since the two meta-analyses discussed here. These include the New DIETs study,[16] HER Health Study,[17] and the VA BEACH Diet Study,[18] all of which reported significant weight loss among individuals prescribed a PBDs.
The Academy of Nutrition and Dietetics Position Paper states that vegan and vegetarian diets “are healthful, nutritionally adequate, and may provide health benefits in the prevention and treatment of certain diseases.”[19] Use of PBDs for weight loss may confer benefits to improved diet quality not seen with traditional, energy-restricted diet approaches. For example, a 22-week intervention for adults with type 2 diabetes comparing the use of a PBD vs. the American Diabetes Association diet guidelines (ADA diet) found significantly greater improvements in dietary quality (assessed by the Alternate Healthy Eating Index, AHEI) among the PBDs participants as compared to the ADA diet participants.[20] Another study, which analyzed the menu plans of popular weight loss books using the AHEI, found that the Ornish plan—a PBD approach for weight loss—had the highest AHEI score, which was significantly higher than plans using a high-protein diet approach.[21]
Adherence to PBDs appears to be similar to most other therapeutic dietary approaches. As stated above, two meta-analyses on clinical trials of PBDs and weight loss were recently published, representing 20 unique intervention studies.[9],[10] Of those 20 studies, 11 reported a measure of dietary adherence (e.g., if participants adhered to their assigned diet). Mean compliance rate of those 11 was 69% for vegan or vegetarian participants and 64% for comparison group participants.[9],[10] The recently completed (and therefore not included in the two meta-analyses) New DIETs study randomized 63 participants to follow a vegan (n = 12), veg (n = 13), pesco-veg (n = 13), semi-veg (n = 13), or omni diet (n = 12) for six months.[16] Diet compliance was defined as the absence of proscribed foods on two 24-hour recalls at two and six months (e.g., no meat, fish, or poultry on vegetarian participants' recalls). No differences in dietary adherence among the five groups were found at two (χ2 = 5.2, P = 0.27) or six months (χ 2 = 0.47, P = 0.98).[22] The New DIETs study also examined whether recommendations to consume a PBD still had advantages for weight loss even if dietary compliance was not complete. Examining data among only non-adherent participants, this study found that non-compliant vegan and vegetarian participants (n = 16) were still consuming a more plant-based diet at six months than other groups, as evidenced by a significantly greater decrease in animal product intake (−190.2 ± 199.2 mg cholesterol intake) than non-adherent pesco-veg/semi-veg (n = 15, −2.3 ± 200.3 mg; P = 0.02) and omni participants (n = 7, 17.0 ± 36.0 mg; P = 0.04). In addition, non-adherent vegan/veg participants lost significantly more weight (−6.0% ± 6.7%) than non-adherent omni participants (−0.4% ± 0.6%; P = 0.04), and this comparison approached significance for the non-adherent pesco-veg/semi-veg groups (−1.9% ± 3.1%; P = 0.06).[22] Overall, despite varying methods for assessing diet compliance, it appears that rates of diet adherence are similar across studies regardless of dietary approach. In addition, even if there is incomplete compliance, there are potentially beneficial effects on diet and weight loss when participants receive instruction to adopt PBDs.
Dietary acceptability has been defined as a “user's judgment of the sum of the advantages and disadvantages of therapeutic diets, which influence the likelihood of adherence.”[23] Assessing dietary acceptability in PBDs interventions has included examining frequency of attrition and using acceptability or quality of life questionnaires.[23] Several previous PBDs intervention trials have found that participants assigned to a PBDs report high acceptability of the diet, similar to that of comparison diets.[24]–[26] For example, in the New DIETs weight loss intervention discussed above, there were no differences among diet groups in changes in any measures of acceptability including: cognitive restraint of eating, disinhibition, or hunger (assessed by the Three-Factor Eating Questionnaire); the psychological influence of the food environment (assessed by the Power of Food Scale); or dietary acceptability (assessed by the Food Acceptability Questionnaire).[22] The New DIETs study also found that dietary preference at baseline (e.g., which diet participants said they did or did not want) had no impact on adherence at six months.[22] Going forward, there is a need to standardize dietary acceptability assessment across weight loss interventions using PBDs. This will build an interpretable body of literature around the acceptability of PBDs for the clinical management of obesity.
Public health interventions that use social and behavioral health theories to inform trial design and delivery are considered more effective than those that lack a clear theoretical base, since health theories can be generalized to other programs to provide insight and strategies for designing an effective intervention.[27] While there is strong evidence for using health theories in traditional nutrition counseling research to promote weight loss,[28] most PBDs studies to date have lacked a clear theoretical basis. Additionally, many of the PBDs clinical weight loss trials have had different behavioral goals, such as focusing on weight loss or managing type 2 diabetes. As a result, the type of participant recruited for each study varied (e.g., overweight participants only, or patients with type 2 diabetes), which may make it difficult to compare one intervention to another.[9]
The majority of PBDs weight loss interventions have relied on a group-based delivery model with group meetings held on a weekly, bi-weekly, or monthly basis.[9],[10] Group-based weight loss programs have been commonly used in other traditional behavioral weight loss interventions and group delivery has been shown to be generally more effective than individually-delivered interventions.[29] Group delivery still limits intervention reach and can be time-consuming and costly; therefore, in order to scale up PBDs interventions, delivery methods that go beyond the face-to-face setting are needed. While a few studies have used technology to deliver[17] or assist with delivery[30] of a PBDs weight loss intervention, more research is needed to examine the effectiveness of implementing PBDs for weight loss via remotely-delivered methods, such as use of the Web, smartphones, or texting.
There is a general underreporting of the delivery methods and intervention materials used in PBDs clinical weight loss trials, which makes replicating specific strategies challenging for researchers. Regardless of the diet type studied, intervention studies often inadequately report their mode of delivery, processes, dose or intensity, duration, and monitoring systems.[31],[32] Journal page limits often restrict the author's ability to report all of the strategies and techniques used in their interventions. Limited description of delivery methods also makes it difficult to ascertain what the most effective components were for achieving the desired health outcome. In order to move the field of PBDs weight loss intervention research forward, the use of standard reporting templates, such as the Intervention Description and Replication checklist, should be used in the dissemination of intervention details to make intervention replicability more achievable.[31]
PBDs can provide adequate nutrition at all stages of the lifecycle including older adults.[19] Studies among older adults have found that nutrient density of PBDs may be higher than omni diets;[33] however, obtaining adequate intakes of certain nutrients are of concern, regardless of dietary pattern, can be a challenge due to a decrease in caloric intake in older age.[19] Nutrients of concern for senior adults include zinc, calcium, iron, and vitamin B12.[19],[33] Older adults, including those consuming omni diets, may have difficulty absorbing vitamin B12,[19],[34] so supplementation is recommended.[35] Plant-based dietary zinc sources include soy products, whole grains, nuts, and legumes.[19] Beans are also good sources of iron and are soft foods that may be helpful if dentition is less than optimal.[19] In addition, plant-based sources of calcium include calcium-fortified juices and plant milks, low oxalate greens, calcium-set tofu, and some beans and seeds.[19]
Weight loss is associated with lower morbidity,[36] but higher mortality in older adults;[37]–[39] a term coined the “obesity paradox.” Most previous research has examined the use of calorie-restricted approaches for weight loss in older adults,[39] with very little research examining how PBDs may impact this obesity paradox in geriatric populations. More research is needed in older populations in order to examine the role PBDs and weight loss may have on both mortality and morbidity.
While there is a wealth of both observational and intervention research around the use of PBDs for weight loss, there are still several areas that require future research. There is a need to study use of PBDs for weight loss with more diverse populations, including racial/ethnic minority groups, males, young adults, children, and older adults.[9],[10] To date, there have been no PBDs weight loss interventions solely among older adults (e.g., ages 65 and older).[9],[10] In general, most of the weight loss interventions conducted with senior adults using standard diet approaches have been of low-to-moderate quality.[40] Moreover, PBDs weight loss trials that last beyond 18 months are needed in order to examine long-term health effects and diet sustainability.[10] Another limitation of PBDs weight loss trials conducted to date is that very few reported the physical activity levels of participants. For example, from the Barnard, et al.,[9] systematic review, only three studies addressed changes in physical activity with two of the studies seeing an increase in physical activity during their interventions[41],[42] and one reporting physical activity remained unchanged throughout the intervention.[43] Lastly, there is a wide variation in what can be defined as a PBD. PBDs are generally defined by what they do not include (e.g., meat, poultry, fish, etc.)[22],[24] versus what they do include (fruit, vegetables, whole grains, and legumes). A research team recently developed a Plant-based Diet Index (PDI), which gives positive scores to plant foods and negative scores to animal foods in the diet.[44] In addition, both healthy and unhealthy PDIs were created that differentiate whole plant foods versus processed ones.[44] The PDI presents a method that can quantify quality of PBDs in future weight loss research.
In summary, individuals consuming PBDs tend to have lower BMI than those consuming non-PBDs. The adoption of PBDs also appears effective for weight loss. Additional research that examines the use of PBDs for obesity management among more diverse groups and for longer periods of time is needed in order to address weight loss maintenance. Based on the available evidence, however, PBDs should be considered a viable option for patients who are interested in losing weight and improving dietary quality consistent with chronic disease prevention and treatment.
Disclaimer: The information and advice herein is not intended for use in or as a substitute for the diagnosis or treatment of any health or physical condition or as a substitute for a physician-patient relationship which has been established by an in-person evaluation of a patient. Do not change your diet if you are ill or on medication without the advice of a qualified health care professional such as your physician. In layman's terms, if you are taking any medications switching to a whole food, plant based, no oil diet will require your medications be closely monitored by your physician. And may require some of your medications to be quickly reduced or stopped. Reducing or stopping medications needs to be done under the direct supervision of a physician.