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    Explore "weightmanagement" with insightful episodes like "How To Eat To Gain The Most Muscle", "Does calorie counting work? - The Big IF Dailies", "Lose weight and feel great after 40, with Sam Rice", "#86 Nutrition Science Series (Part 1 of 3) Why Everything About Nutrition Could Be Wrong with Professor Tim Spector" and "Exercise: Fat Buster or Belly Flop?" from podcasts like ""RP Strength Podcast", "ZOE Science & Nutrition", "The Liz Earle Wellbeing Show", "The Doctor's Kitchen Podcast" and "Science Vs"" and more!

    Episodes (6)

    How To Eat To Gain The Most Muscle

    How To Eat To Gain The Most Muscle

    0:30 Bodybuilding sucks
    3:18 Nutrition For Muscle Growth
    4:24 Defining Your Goal
    8:10 Gaining fat problem
    10:10 Gaintaining
    14:41 Rate of weight gain
    19:00 How to deal with looking fat
    26:50 New RP products for gaining muscle
    28:42 What should your surplus be
    30:10 Cheat meals
    35:55 Reframing your thinking
    40:37 Increasing calories after dieting
    45:16 How do you decide what macros to add
    48:16 Mass season
    51:18 Can you mini cut forever
    54:00 Semiglutide

    Does calorie counting work? - The Big IF Dailies

    Does calorie counting work? - The Big IF Dailies

    Food package labels can be complex. With so much information, many of us set a beeline for the calorie number, but there’s more going on in food than just the amount of energy. How much value is there in counting calories, and should you continue? The latest science could make you reconsider. 

    In today’s daily episode of ZOE Science & Nutrition, Jonathan is joined by Dr Sarah Berry to answer the question: Does calorie counting work?

    This episode is part of a limited series to celebrate the launch of The Big IF study: The world’s biggest clinical study to discover how intermittent fasting affects our mood, energy and hunger.  Want to know if intermittent fasting can work for you?  

    TAKE PART for FREE: joinzoe.com/thebigif

    This podcast was produced by Fascinate Productions.

    #86 Nutrition Science Series (Part 1 of 3) Why Everything About Nutrition Could Be Wrong with Professor Tim Spector

    #86 Nutrition Science Series (Part 1 of 3)  Why Everything About Nutrition Could Be Wrong with Professor Tim Spector

    Is everything we have been told about nutrition wrong? And have we questioned prevailing dietary dogma enough? Are we asking the right questions in nutrition science and if not, how do we rectify it?


    Professor Tim SpectorProfessor of Genetic Epidemiology at Kings College London and honorary consultant Physician at Guys and St Thomas’ Hospitals is my guest this week and we dive into these questions and more.


    He is the lead researcher behind the world’s biggest citizen science health project – the Covid Symptom study app. This free tool has been used by more than 4 million people in the UK, US, and Sweden. The app identified new symptoms of the disease and risk factors as well as monitoring its progress to warn health authorities. 


    He has published four popular books- including the best-selling Diet Myth and more recently, Spoon-Fed, a Sunday Times bestseller that I think is absolutely fantastic.


    On the show today we talk about:

    • Why the calorie in calorie out dogma is entirely flawed
    • Why salt may not be the prime suspect
    • The approach to pesticides we should take
    • Artificially sweetened beverages
    • Practical suggestions for how to live healthier
    • What the future of personalised nutrition could hold


    Check out The Doctor's Kitchen website for full show notes and social media links for this episode



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    Exercise: Fat Buster or Belly Flop?

    Exercise: Fat Buster or Belly Flop?
    Lots of people hit the gym to shed unwanted pounds, but they don’t always see results on the scale. This week, we tackle the power of exercise and why you should bother. We speak with obesity expert Dr. Yoni Freedhoff, psychiatrist Dr. Gary Cooney, neuroscientist Prof. Wendy Suzuki and urologist Dr. Stacey Kenfield. Check out the full transcript here: http://bit.ly/2kqreUR UPDATE 10/31/19: An earlier version of this episode said that exercise isn’t a reliable treatment for depression. Some scientists reached out to us about clinical trials we missed. These newer trials found that exercise can help with depression. And we now think the research in this space is stronger than we made it sound. We’ve updated the episode. Selected references: The study which looked at the effect of exercising 5 days a week for a year on weight: http://bit.ly/2mitPR8Gary's Cochrane review on the benefits of exercise for depression: http://bit.ly/2kqrGCxThe study which found that exercise is linked to a lower risk of getting dementia: http://bit.ly/2mj9qeL Stacey's study on exercise and prostate cancer: http://bit.ly/2kuPwgu  Credits: This episode was produced by Wendy Zukerman, with help from Meryl Horn, Rose Rimler and Lexi Krupp. Our senior producer is Kaitlyn Sawrey. We’re edited by Caitlin Kenney and Blythe Terrell. Fact checking by Diane Kelly. Mix and sound design by Peter Leonard. Music by Peter Leonard, Emma Munger and Bobby Lord. Recording assistance from Joel Cox, Andrea Rangecroft, Natalie Jones, and Mark Totti. A huge thanks to all the scientists we got in touch with for this episode, including Professor Virginia Berridge, Professor James Blumenthal, Professor Kirk Erickson, Dr. Tara Walker, Dr. Shannon Halloway, Professor Steven Petruzzello, Dr. Kristine Beaulieu, Dr. Aric Sudicky and many others! A special thanks to the Emmanuel Dzotsi, Zukerman family, and Joseph Lavelle Wilson. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

    A Saner Mindset For Weight Loss

    A Saner Mindset For Weight Loss
    The way many of us think about weight loss is totally counter-productive. Focus on healthy habits you can sustain instead of the numbers on the scale.

    Here's what to remember:
    - Forget goal weights. Instead, focus on behavioral goals.
    - Start with small changes and let them snowball.
    - A loss of only 3% of your body weight can meaningfully improve your health.
    - Remember that your best weight is the one you reach when you live the healthiest life you can actually enjoy.

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