What's your though on the Blood Type Diet
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heiliskrimsli wrote: »ConquerAndBloom wrote: »Dr. Oz has interviewed this guy, that alone tells me everything I need to know.
Dr. Oz is supposedly a very good cardiac surgeon, but he is not a scientist and knows very little about anything else medical.
Surgeons are kind of like mechanics, in that they can fix all kind of stuff that's wrong with your insides by opening you up and manipulating the parts around, but they are definitely not automotive engineers.
There is no excuse for some of the stuff Oz pushes. He's more than qualified to read and understand the relevant legitimate research.2 -
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Thanks all four your feedback.2
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What are you going to do with the feedback?2
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Trust the process that's working for you. If it ain't broke, don't fix it.0
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dutchandkiwi wrote: »Blood type diet is total bogus - a number of people here have eaten according to their blood type only to find that really they were mistaken on their bloodtype Yet they felt great on "their"bloottype diet - just search the boards - it becomes highly entertaining at times.
The only thing it does is change your eating habits If then you are in a deficit you loose weight. In the end it comes down to CICO.
Now note some people do have medical issues that can and sometimes can be addressed by diet - Bloodtype ain't one of them
http://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pmwiki.php/Main/MagicFeather
In the context of diets, I've always called that the Special K phenomenon, after the small print on the back of Special K boxes, which used to say that a study had found participants lost weight eating Special K for breakfast as part of a calorie controlled diet. I rather think that magic feather diet sounds so much more withering, so I think I'll be calling them that from now on.
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I would be more inclined to get my DNA test done and it shows what foods are good and bad for your specific DNA makeup.2
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I found a research report that showed each version of diet was effective as a diet, but there was no special connection to your blood type. It's just a fad approach that may help one psychologically in restricting their calories in.
edit: found the link https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3893150/
@Theo166 thanks for the great link. I had wondered about that way of eating. I expect the diet works because one starts to focus on getting healthy and I think that may be factual about most diets.4 -
I would be more inclined to get my DNA test done and it shows what foods are good and bad for your specific DNA makeup.
these tests are almost as hit and miss as the blood-type diet...
http://www.livescience.com/15137-genetic-test-lose-weight.html4 -
I asked my doc about it and she told me to throw the book in the garbage. I was using it and felt like I loss weight but she did not agree. Her reply anything a person decreases food intake and eats better with exercise 3-4 days a week, a individual will lose lbs. confession, I still have the book but don't reply on it for dieting.3
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I'd be screwed because somehow... I have no idea what my blood type is.0
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heiliskrimsli wrote: »I found a research report that showed each version of diet was effective as a diet, but there was no special connection to your blood type. It's just a fad approach that may help one psychologically in restricting their calories in.
edit: found the link https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3893150/
I am annoyed that some researcher thought assigning diets by blood type was potentially valid enough to spend time and money testing the hypothesis. Or maybe there's a real need for ABO diet debunking in Canada?
I think valid research that debunks pseudoscience fad diets is in the public interest, much better than some of the money thrown at climate change research (i"m all for valid climate research but much has been wasted). Grad students need something to work on.
Sometimes I worry about the potential effect of legitimizing the obviously ridiculous by ever giving it a stage next to real science because then the purveyors of that which is clearly hokum will use the fact that they got a seat at the table, a place in the debate with real scientists, or an actual study commissioned as a wedge to try and say that what they're doing is anything other than fantasy.
It's a double-edged sword in many cases. If you don't refute them (and spend time and money and effort to let them on the stage so you can) they scream that science is afraid of them. If you do, they claim they got their place on the stage because they're "real science" too.
May I borrow every word of this for the next time someone asks me why I'm an Atheist? This works for so many situations.3 -
For anyone who, because Dr. Oz is a surgeon, still want to argue he must know what of he speaks, I have two words for you: Ben Carson.
Consider: "My own personal theory is that Joseph built the pyramids to store grain. Now all the archaeologists think that they were made for the pharaohs’ graves. But, you know, it would have to be something awfully big if you stop and think about it. And I don’t think it’d just disappear over the course of time to store that much grain."
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HeidiCooksSupper wrote: »For anyone who, because Dr. Oz is a surgeon, still want to argue he must know what of he speaks, I have two words for you: Ben Carson.
Consider: "My own personal theory is that Joseph built the pyramids to store grain. Now all the archaeologists think that they were made for the pharaohs’ graves. But, you know, it would have to be something awfully big if you stop and think about it. And I don’t think it’d just disappear over the course of time to store that much grain."
Big difference, is that's a theological and not a medical opinion.
Dr Oz presents erroneous medical opinions.
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Just another far diet. Might as well base a diet on hair color or eye color.1
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BabyBear76 wrote: »Just another far diet. Might as well base a diet on hair color or eye color.
Oh, but my eyes are hazel so what type of diet would that mean? Would I have to eat a combo of the blue-eyed and green-eyed diet or have one especially for me? Be right back, writing a diet book. Look for it in stores soon.2 -
Sure sounds fun. It's like your horoscope. It has entertainment value, but you shouldn't live your life by it.1
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SiegfriedXXL wrote: »BabyBear76 wrote: »Just another far diet. Might as well base a diet on hair color or eye color.
Oh, but my eyes are hazel so what type of diet would that mean? Would I have to eat a combo of the blue-eyed and green-eyed diet or have one especially for me? Be right back, writing a diet book. Look for it in stores soon.
Hazelnuts. I mean come on, what else would a hazel eye coloured person eat.
Now my eyes are kind of a dark brown. I wonder what I should eat.5 -
Chocolate. And lots of coffee. Duh!3
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SiegfriedXXL wrote: »BabyBear76 wrote: »Just another far diet. Might as well base a diet on hair color or eye color.
Oh, but my eyes are hazel so what type of diet would that mean? Would I have to eat a combo of the blue-eyed and green-eyed diet or have one especially for me? Be right back, writing a diet book. Look for it in stores soon.
Mine are green/blue/grey/brown hazel - though the brown bits are freckles.
I figure I can either eat anything or nothing on this diet. With my luck, it'll be nothing.4 -
SiegfriedXXL wrote: »BabyBear76 wrote: »Just another far diet. Might as well base a diet on hair color or eye color.
Oh, but my eyes are hazel so what type of diet would that mean? Would I have to eat a combo of the blue-eyed and green-eyed diet or have one especially for me? Be right back, writing a diet book. Look for it in stores soon.
Mine are green/blue/grey/brown hazel - though the brown bits are freckles.
I figure I can either eat anything or nothing on this diet. With my luck, it'll be nothing.
But you'll definitely lose weight!3 -
bunk1
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estherdragonbat wrote: »Chocolate. And lots of coffee. Duh!
Perfect!0 -
SiegfriedXXL wrote: »BabyBear76 wrote: »Just another far diet. Might as well base a diet on hair color or eye color.
Oh, but my eyes are hazel so what type of diet would that mean? Would I have to eat a combo of the blue-eyed and green-eyed diet or have one especially for me? Be right back, writing a diet book. Look for it in stores soon.
Mine are green/blue/grey/brown hazel - though the brown bits are freckles.
I figure I can either eat anything or nothing on this diet. With my luck, it'll be nothing.
You can eat everything but it has to be perfectly timed with your color shifts. Woe betide you if you eat green eyed foods while your eyes trend grey. Then all those calories will turn to fat and you'll gain XX of pounds at once.1 -
To be brief, there is no scientific evidence to support the blood type diet as it has been presented and no clinical evidence that it improves health. Zero.
Mr. D'Adamo and others are floating these ideas on nothing but pure speculation and rhetorical gymnastics.1 -
I was one of the suckers that fell for it years ago, and I mean I followed it to the T for about 3 months...all I lost was a lot of patience, and all I gained was acid reflux.0
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Oh, but my eyes are hazel so what type of diet would that mean? Would I have to eat a combo of the blue-eyed and green-eyed diet or have one especially for me? Be right back, writing a diet book. Look for it in stores soon.
Actually, I think you would have to eat a combo of the brown-eyed diet and the green-eyed diet. Also, the exact proportions would depend on the individual amounts of green and brown in your eyes.:-D1 -
I think the Blood Type Diet is bunk. But then again, I'm a type A who likes everything and does not want to become a vegan or even a vegetarian.0
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HeidiCooksSupper wrote: »For anyone who, because Dr. Oz is a surgeon, still want to argue he must know what of he speaks, I have two words for you: Ben Carson.
Consider: "My own personal theory is that Joseph built the pyramids to store grain. Now all the archaeologists think that they were made for the pharaohs’ graves. But, you know, it would have to be something awfully big if you stop and think about it. And I don’t think it’d just disappear over the course of time to store that much grain."
Your example lacks logic. Carson has never claimed to be an expert on human history, he was speaking from his faith. I'd of had no problem letting him operate on my brain when he was a practicing surgeon. I'd also listen carefully if he spoke on other medical issues.
I don't know what happened to Oz, he seemed to give solid advice early in his TV career.1
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