"Slow Metabolism" May Help Explain High Dieting Failure Rates
5 hours ago
- #weight-loss
- #dieting-failure
- #metabolism
- The high failure rate of dieting is often blamed on hyperpalatable foods, loss of willpower, or overeating, but metabolism plays a significantly underestimated role.
- Obese or formerly obese individuals may need only 1,400-1,800 kcal/day to maintain a BMI of 23-26, similar to starvation rations, making long-term dieting unsustainable for many.
- Metabolism is innate, highly variable between individuals (with BMR differing by up to 1,000 kcal/day despite similar factors), and largely resistant to change through exercise or diet.
- Exercise has limited impact on weight maintenance; studies show that even tripling physical activity only allows for about 50 extra daily calories, as the body adapts by becoming more efficient.
- Successful dieters on social media often represent genetic metabolic outliers, not the average person, leading to misleading advice and unrealistic expectations for regular individuals.
- GLP-1 drugs offer an effective solution for obesity, and future advancements may make it a curable condition, highlighting the need for medical interventions beyond traditional dieting.