dr oz 3 day detox cleanse
Replies
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It's bogus. They lose water (and maybe muscle) weight, and then will gain it all back in a couple of days.
And if Dr. Oz promotes it, you know it's a scam.
^ This. Dr. Oz is a quack.
Only in terms of his Oprah/weightloss stuff. He's still one of the world's preeminent heart surgeons.
Not anymore. He's pretty much been written off by the medical community.
He does surgery only one day a week, and every cardiac surgeon I know (I work with them, so yes, I do know a few) says that low frequency is not enough to keep you at your best form. Two days a week is the minimum they suggest, and they'd prefer cardiac surgeons work in the OR 3-4 days a week.0 -
It's bogus. They lose water (and maybe muscle) weight, and then will gain it all back in a couple of days.
And if Dr. Oz promotes it, you know it's a scam.
^ This. Dr. Oz is a quack.
Only in terms of his Oprah/weightloss stuff. He's still one of the world's preeminent heart surgeons.
The fact that he's a world-leading heart surgeon (debatable) should tell you that he is more than likely not an expert in diet & nutrition. Just because someone is a doctor doesn't mean they know everything about anything medical/health related ever.0 -
A detox is not a purchased product, it is a time period where one stops their regular diet to let the body begin repairing the issue causing problems. Juicing and fasting allows for the body to receive nutrients and proper rest so it doesn't need to worry about heavy foods needing processing. That's a detox. I don't care for what Dr. Oz is pushing. Go buy greens, vegetables, and fruits then watch how well your body responds.
Does your body detox all the chemicals in your natural, fruit and veggie detox?
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I have patients ask me all the time about colon cleansing, detoxing, fasting - most of these promoted by the great OZ. It may make you feel good at the time, but it is not healthy. Your body does not need a "break" from toxins and if you are truly concerned about toxins eat organic. By avoiding processed foods as these detoxing schemes push you will automatically feel better because you are eating whole foods, not chemicals with some food products added.
Any crap you see on TV is just that, so in addition to avoiding the toxins in your food avoid the toxins in your environment and stop believing the junk on TV. Eat healthy, don't buy prepackaged/processed foods, drink water and exercise. Try it for 2 weeks and I guarantee you will feel better (and lose weight). (WOW now I think I could do Dr. OZ's job...LOL)0 -
Your body does need a "break" from toxins. You even suggested avoiding processed foods that contain toxins because they will make you feel better. So in essence you do then need a "break".I have patients ask me all the time about colon cleansing, detoxing, fasting - most of these promoted by the great OZ. It may make you feel good at the time, but it is not healthy. Your body does not need a "break" from toxins and if you are truly concerned about toxins eat organic. By avoiding processed foods as these detoxing schemes push you will automatically feel better because you are eating whole foods, not chemicals with some food products added.
Any crap you see on TV is just that, so in addition to avoiding the toxins in your food avoid the toxins in your environment and stop believing the junk on TV. Eat healthy, don't buy prepackaged/processed foods, drink water and exercise. Try it for 2 weeks and I guarantee you will feel better (and lose weight). (WOW now I think I could do Dr. OZ's job...LOL)0 -
Contrary to what the vehemently anti-detox crowd will purport, it's not going to harm you either.
A.C.E. Certified Personal/Group FitnessTrainer
IDEA Fitness member
Kickboxing Certified Instructor
Been in fitness for 30 years and have studied kinesiology and nutrition0 -
Contrary to what the vehemently anti-detox crowd will purport, it's not going to harm you either.
A.C.E. Certified Personal/Group FitnessTrainer
IDEA Fitness member
Kickboxing Certified Instructor
Been in fitness for 30 years and have studied kinesiology and nutrition
Agreed. I like an occasional 24-hour fast. It's even cheaper than eating.0 -
A detox is not a purchased product, it is a time period where one stops their regular diet to let the body begin repairing the issue causing problems. Juicing and fasting allows for the body to receive nutrients and proper rest so it doesn't need to worry about heavy foods needing processing. That's a detox. I don't care for what Dr. Oz is pushing. Go buy greens, vegetables, and fruits then watch how well your body responds.
And fasting REDUCES the amount of nutrients due to less consumption. So much conflict in statements here.
A.C.E. Certified Personal/Group FitnessTrainer
IDEA Fitness member
Kickboxing Certified Instructor
Been in fitness for 30 years and have studied kinesiology and nutrition0 -
It's bogus. They lose water (and maybe muscle) weight, and then will gain it all back in a couple of days.
And if Dr. Oz promotes it, you know it's a scam.
lol0 -
Your body does need a "break" from toxins. You even suggested avoiding processed foods that contain toxins because they will make you feel better. So in essence you do then need a "break".
Think about it: what is a toxin? It's a poison. It can kill you. If processed/low quality food were laced with toxins, our prison population should be much smaller due to them eating nothing but toxins.
Processed foods may be devoid of NUTRITIONAL value and high in calories. That's the reason why people MAY want to limit them.
A.C.E. Certified Personal/Group FitnessTrainer
IDEA Fitness member
Kickboxing Certified Instructor
Been in fitness for 30 years and have studied kinesiology and nutrition0 -
It's bogus. They lose water (and maybe muscle) weight, and then will gain it all back in a couple of days.
And if Dr. Oz promotes it, you know it's a scam.
^ This. Dr. Oz is a quack.
Only in terms of his Oprah/weightloss stuff. He's still one of the world's preeminent heart surgeons.
Not anymore. He's pretty much been written off by the medical community.
He does surgery only one day a week, and every cardiac surgeon I know (I work with them, so yes, I do know a few) says that low frequency is not enough to keep you at your best form. Two days a week is the minimum they suggest, and they'd prefer cardiac surgeons work in the OR 3-4 days a week.
You may be right about his surgical chops, I have no basis from which I can debate that with you. But someone doesn't remain professor at the Department of Surgery at Columbia University and director of the Cardiovascular Institute and Complementary Medicine Program at New York-Presbyterian Hospital if they've been written off by the medical community. But hey, I'm not as good of a programmer as I used to be before I moved into management ... I don't think that's an indictment of me or my skill. Take that as you will.0 -
Who doesn't love a good detox thread? Who's with me??
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I am just going to leave these two links here...enjoy
http://www.huffingtonpost.ca/2014/01/17/dr-oz-detox_n_4615601.html
http://www.cbc.ca/news/health/detox-treatments-by-dr-oz-and-others-lack-evidence-benefit-1.24989100 -
Detox this, detox that.....the LIVER removes the "toxins".
If you are really concerned, follow a diet that people with liver disease follow:
http://www.nlm.nih.gov/medlineplus/ency/article/002441.htm0 -
Your body does need a "break" from toxins. You even suggested avoiding processed foods that contain toxins because they will make you feel better. So in essence you do then need a "break".I have patients ask me all the time about colon cleansing, detoxing, fasting - most of these promoted by the great OZ. It may make you feel good at the time, but it is not healthy. Your body does not need a "break" from toxins and if you are truly concerned about toxins eat organic. By avoiding processed foods as these detoxing schemes push you will automatically feel better because you are eating whole foods, not chemicals with some food products added.
Any crap you see on TV is just that, so in addition to avoiding the toxins in your food avoid the toxins in your environment and stop believing the junk on TV. Eat healthy, don't buy prepackaged/processed foods, drink water and exercise. Try it for 2 weeks and I guarantee you will feel better (and lose weight). (WOW now I think I could do Dr. OZ's job...LOL)
What toxins are you talking about? Give me the names of two. That's it. Only two.
....How about just one? Can you manage it?0 -
Who needs a fancy cleanse when you can just eat these....
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What, it all works great for Oprah, right guise?0
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It's bogus. They lose water (and maybe muscle) weight, and then will gain it all back in a couple of days.
And if Dr. Oz promotes it, you know it's a scam.
^ This. Dr. Oz is a quack.
Only in terms of his Oprah/weightloss stuff. He's still one of the world's preeminent heart surgeons.
Dr. Oz was on the Elvis Duran show just after the holidays and said, flat out, that he does not endorse or support ANY kind of programs WHATSOEVER pertaining to health and weight loss. He has several books out and his show, that is all he does. Though people think he's a quack, or whatever you want to call him, he's bringing education to those who don't go to the doctors as much as they should and enlightening people on conditions and diseases that they should know about. Should you follow him like the Bible? Absolutely not, but he's not doing any harm to those who watch.0 -
Dr. Oz was on the Elvis Duran show just after the holidays and said, flat out, that he does not endorse or support ANY kind of programs WHATSOEVER pertaining to health and weight loss. He has several books out and his show, that is all he does. Though people think he's a quack, or whatever you want to call him, he's bringing education to those who don't go to the doctors as much as they should and enlightening people on conditions and diseases that they should know about. Should you follow him like the Bible? Absolutely not, but he's not doing any harm to those who watch.
Have you ever watched his show? It's nothing more than a glorified infomercial for whatever miracle of the week he's shilling.
Bringing education and enlightening people? We obviously have very different ideas as to that those terms mean..........0 -
Eat at a deficit
Exercise
That is the way to do it.0 -
It's bogus. They lose water (and maybe muscle) weight, and then will gain it all back in a couple of days.
And if Dr. Oz promotes it, you know it's a scam.
^ This. Dr. Oz is a quack.
Only in terms of his Oprah/weightloss stuff. He's still one of the world's preeminent heart surgeons.
Dr. Oz was on the Elvis Duran show just after the holidays and said, flat out, that he does not endorse or support ANY kind of programs WHATSOEVER pertaining to health and weight loss. He has several books out and his show, that is all he does. Though people think he's a quack, or whatever you want to call him, he's bringing education to those who don't go to the doctors as much as they should and enlightening people on conditions and diseases that they should know about. Should you follow him like the Bible? Absolutely not, but he's not doing any harm to those who watch.
He has promoted raspberry keytones and 7-keto as fat burning aids, just for example.0 -
Who needs a fancy cleanse when you can just eat these....
I spent a good hour reading customer reviews on these on Amazon!0 -
Who needs a fancy cleanse when you can just eat these....
I spent a good hour reading customer reviews on these on Amazon!
Holy crap (pun intended) this was better than the Paula Dean English Peas reviews!0
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