Any luck with the DASH Diet?
aubaby
Posts: 48 Member
Has anyone had good weight loss results with the DASH Diet?
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Replies
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Never heard of it. My favorite is the balanced diet. Tons of luck.0
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arditarose wrote: »Never heard of it. My favorite is the balanced diet. Tons of luck.
The DASH diet is QUITE balanced actually. Google it. It's all over the news and what not lately. Something about it being the BEST and HEALTHIEST or something of that sort.
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Sabine_Stroehm wrote: »arditarose wrote: »Never heard of it. My favorite is the balanced diet. Tons of luck.
The DASH diet is QUITE balanced actually. Google it. It's all over the news and what not lately. Something about it being the BEST and HEALTHIEST or something of that sort.
Will do0 -
OP: there have been a few threads about it in the last few days, given the news, but other than that, there was a group here a year or so ago. A few posts about good success with weight loss AND hypertension, but it was never a very active group.
Here's my thought: if a formal diet teaches someone to eat right, I'm all for it. Education is key.
Best of luck!0 -
Thanks for the input.0
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Basically it is a low fat diet.0
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My husband and I started it yesterday. To be continued...0
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Has anyone had good weight loss results with the DASH Diet?
Is that anything like the dine and dash diet? :-)
I'm not at all familiar with it so I guess it's time for Google and I to get acquainted.
Good luck either way.
To add, I’d say if it ain’t balanced forget about it. The body needs the carbs, fat, and protein. We just have to find the balance that works for us.0 -
It got ranked #1 by US News or something (although if you read the reasoning in those surveys you might come away skeptical, as I did). I think it's weird too, but then I think wanting to follow some specific diet rather than just eating healthy and lowering your calories is weird.
Also, I have no reason to follow a diet for hypertension, although it might well be helpful for those who do.0 -
DASH is basically an update of the food pyramid rebranded under a snappy new name. It's not a fad diet; it's basically about getting your balanced servings in from the various food groups.
It's fine, but it doesn't replace calorie counting.0 -
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It's not a basic low fat diet. Not in the sense we've come to know low fat diets these days. ( to include all meat which I luvvvv, lol ) It was created initially for patients with High Blood Pressure. It contains tons of vegetables, some fruits, not too much red meat. Been around a while, not a fad. eating clean is relatively similar to it. It does work. Good Luck0
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DASH is basically an update of the food pyramid rebranded under a snappy new name. It's not a fad diet; it's basically about getting your balanced servings in from the various food groups.
Seems reasonable enough (although I have my issues with the pyramid), but WHY do people have to follow some named diet? Why not just follow the pyramid or my plate or figure out what you (not you!) think is healthy and balanced. I SO don't understand it. Seems so weird to want to follow some special diet.
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It has less refined grains, which is what you want to watch if you are pre-diabetic. It also helps people with high cholesterol, hypertension, etc. They do have a plan for weight loss as well as the regular plan which is to keep your blood sugars and cholesterol in check.0
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Actually there is a DASH diet for weight loss as well.0 -
lemurcat12 wrote: »DASH is basically an update of the food pyramid rebranded under a snappy new name. It's not a fad diet; it's basically about getting your balanced servings in from the various food groups.
Seems reasonable enough (although I have my issues with the pyramid), but WHY do people have to follow some named diet? Why not just follow the pyramid or my plate or figure out what you (not you!) think is healthy and balanced. I SO don't understand it. Seems so weird to want to follow some special diet.0 -
I did the "DINE & DASH" when I was younger.
Burned a lot of calories gettin the heck out of there............0 -
Has anyone had good weight loss results with the DASH Diet?
I haven't seen it used for weight loss, but I have heard success stories for lowering blood pressure. I like the diet since it's not some crazy fad diet. It's a legit diet prescribed by doctors.
In case you need more info : http://www.mayoclinic.org/healthy-living/nutrition-and-healthy-eating/in-depth/dash-diet/art-20048456
recipes: http://www.mayoclinic.org/healthy-living/recipes/dash-diet-recipes/rcs-200771460 -
I followed the diabetic guidelines for portions for years, which is very much like the DASH diet. It's healthy, it's balanced. It's good for you.
To lose weight, I portion out like a diabetic/DASH, but cut the calories a bit. Snacks went from 200 cals to 100 cals for instance.0 -
Sabine_Stroehm wrote: »lemurcat12 wrote: »DASH is basically an update of the food pyramid rebranded under a snappy new name. It's not a fad diet; it's basically about getting your balanced servings in from the various food groups.
Seems reasonable enough (although I have my issues with the pyramid), but WHY do people have to follow some named diet? Why not just follow the pyramid or my plate or figure out what you (not you!) think is healthy and balanced. I SO don't understand it. Seems so weird to want to follow some special diet.
I guess it's just personality differences, but it seems really weird to me to want someone else telling you how to eat. I think people make it way too complicated and then think you need a PhD to figure out what's mostly pretty simple or common sense. I mean the basics are things that everyone already knows. It just seems to be that eating vegetables and getting in some protein is super boring, but going on a special shiny new diet with a NAME and buying special foods from a list and tossing all your old stuff seems more exciting or something than going to the store and buying the fruits and veggies and meats that seem appealing, like regular folks do. Or so it seems.
I was being kind of grumpy yesterday, but for some reason the idea that you need a special diet (unless you actually do, like DASH was intended, I suppose) really rubs me the wrong way. (Although to be fair DASH is not much of an offender. I just think the good bits are basic common sense that people know anyway, and that meal plans are silly.)0 -
lemurcat12 wrote: »DASH is basically an update of the food pyramid rebranded under a snappy new name. It's not a fad diet; it's basically about getting your balanced servings in from the various food groups.
Seems reasonable enough (although I have my issues with the pyramid), but WHY do people have to follow some named diet? Why not just follow the pyramid or my plate or figure out what you (not you!) think is healthy and balanced. I SO don't understand it. Seems so weird to want to follow some special diet.
Yeah, I'm with you. Personally I hate the idea of being told what to eat. But people who want something more structured could do a lot worse.0 -
ShellyBell999 wrote: »I did the "DINE & DASH" when I was younger.
Burned a lot of calories gettin the heck out of there............
LOL!0 -
Why do all the fat people call all the diets lame. Is like doing so makes them so cool and not fat.-6
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From what I've read about it, it looks very balanced and a good common-sense approach to healthy eating and weight loss. I prefer a "named" diet or a book or program because I get lost when there are too MANY choices and a free for all. I am currently working through the Mayo Clinic diet book (which was ranked right under the Mayo Clinic) and has also been around forever. I like that it takes you through stages of changing habits that really undermine a person's ability to reduce calories. Sometimes just saying "eat less, move more" isn't enough. I tend to overanalyze things so maybe that's why I'm drawn to it. We'll see how it goes!0
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ckholland3 wrote: »From what I've read about it, it looks very balanced and a good common-sense approach to healthy eating and weight loss.
Seems like it, although probably with some specific things related to its derivation (like no salt and someone said low fat) that I wouldn't find necessary or helpful (apparently the website doesn't get details so you will buy the book). That's actually what I find mind-boggling, though--do people really need a book to tell them to eat vegetables and add protein to their meals? It is common sense. I think named diets are all just ways to convince yourself you are doing something beyond the boring stuff everyone knows they should do.
But if it works for you, that's great.
I overanalyze my own diet from time to time, but that's why I can't understand why someone would want to follow a preset plan. None of my business, though, really. ;-) Like I said, I was just kind of grumpy yesterday.0 -
At the risk of having a ton of judgmental comments rain down on me, we're doing the DASH (Dietary Approaches to Stopping Hypertension) Diet because my husband's doctor recommended it to him. I'm participating partly in a show of support and partly out of self-preservation.
The doctor recommended DASH because my husband's blood pressure is high due to a congenital health issue. He needs to keep his blood pressure low and was having trouble controlling it. A few days into the DASH diet, his blood pressure was TOO low and he needed adjustment to his medication. Now his blood pressure is controlled with half as much medication and at a much more desirable level.
There is plenty of free information available for those who can and want to set it up themselves.
We bought the books and are following the menus because I have neither the time nor the inclination to put that much thought into meal planning. Perhaps to some on this board that just sounds horribly lazy and lacking in common sense. It works for us. I prefer to spend my time on other things. Like working out.
In the past I've had success with weighing, measuring, and tracking. However, my husband, who would deny it vehemently, is an expert saboteur. And because of our work schedules he does most of the cooking and menu planning in our home. Since his doctor recommended this, he will follow it. He lost 17 pounds in two weeks and now excludes processed meat from the menu. For years I've tried convincing him to exclude it and he didn't listen. Now it's not part of DASH, so it's off. That's just one example.
Honestly, the comments here that say it's a balanced diet are spot-on. I find that the book calls for a bit more processed food and more dairy than I'd care to include in my diet, but that's probably what makes it practical and palatable to the vast majority of the population. I lost 6 pounds in two weeks after months of no success.
My two cents. YMMV.0 -
Thanks for the positive feedback. I bought the DASH book and even though I am counting calories and trying to eat right, I do not have a thyroid and am on synthetic thyroid and sometimes you need a little something more to help you lose.0
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Really just eat a balanced diet of natural food, mostly plants. One thing I don't like about DASH is the high amount of carbs, which is not conducive to weight loss that a lot of people on the diet need (maybe minor weight loss).0
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