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The Big Lie: Processed Food Can Be Out-Exercised!

Wayne-in-Grey

MY RECENT INVOLVEMENT with the NHS has opened my eyes to their losing battle with obesity because they are up against fitness bloggers, celebrities, and the food industry, who promote the assumption that going to the gym offsets crap eating habits.

Gym memberships, fitness monitoring apps, sports drinks, and online workout videos reinforce the belief that if you work out, you can still drink copious amounts of Coke, eat burgers and pizza and drop weight.

Yes, exercise offers many health advantages, but weight loss happens by your diet, not your exercise level.

Scientific data confirms this, and the food and fitness industry mislead people into thinking that weight loss requires just exercise.

The Function of Exercise for Health

First of all, general health depends on activity. Regular physical activity develops muscles and bones and improves mental health, cardiovascular condition, and mood. Furthermore, helping to avoid chronic conditions, including certain malignancies, type 2 diabetes, and heart disease, is exercise. A good lifestyle depends on it, and it also helps control weight and prolong the general lifespan.

Why More Than Exercise Is Needed for Weight Loss?

The evidence is quite clear: a poor diet cannot be out-exercised. Published in the journal Obesity Reviews, one of the most thorough research studies examined several studies and concluded that exercise causes slight weight loss. This is so because, on a regular diet, the calories consumed usually exceed those burnt during activity.

A Mayo Clinic study indicates that running would take more than an hour to burn off one slice of pizza and much longer to burn off a sugary Coke.

For instance, a 150-pound runner at six mph consumes almost 600 calories an hour. But a regular fast-food lunch might easily have more than 1,000 calories. Hence, even a strict exercise will only partially offset the calorie consumption.

Moreover, physical activity can occasionally cause hunger, which causes individuals to overindulge after a workout, negating the advantages of exercise.

Published in the American Journal of Clinical Nutrition, a study revealed that people often reward themselves with additional food and overestimate the calories burned during exercise, compromising their efforts at weight loss.

The Diet-Exercise Balance

Although general health depends on activity, weight loss primarily results from food. Emphasising that excess sugar and carbohydrates, not lack of exercise, are the leading causes of the obesity epidemic, a paper written in the British Journal of Sports Medicine underlined that “you cannot outrun a bad diet.”

The writers also attacked food and beverage corporations for deceiving the public into believing physical activity might offset lousy eating patterns.

How We Are Misled

The public is misled mainly through the fitness industry and the promoting of unhealthy food and beverage goods. Companies like PepsiCo and Coca-Cola have spent millions advertising the theory that physical exercise can balance off the use of their sugar-filled drinks.

Coca-Cola came under fire in 2015 for financing studies that minimised the impact of nutrition on obesity and instead focused on physical activity.

Many times, fitness plans and workout tools profit from this fallacy. Advertising claims that a new workout program or gadget would help lose weight without addressing the more important element—what people eat. 

Conclusion

The message is to view exercise as a tool for preserving overall health, increasing strength, and extending life—not a miracle panacea for weight loss. However, exercise benefits weight control and general health; a good diet is critical in avoiding obesity and related medical problems. Instead of depending on the idea that one can counter the other, we should concentrate on stressing general health, supporting both physical activity and appropriate eating habits.

MIDLIFE FITNESS