Fast Food Weight
Loss
Is Eating At
McDonald's The New Path To Weight Loss?
Is eating at McDonald’s the new path to weight
loss? Can fast food burgers, fries and sodas fit into your diet
and weight loss program? For years, the answer has been a
resounding NO. But lately, Wendy’s, Burger King and many other
fast food chains have made changes to help consumers stick to a
healthy diet.

Why have fast food companies finally started to pay
attention to healthier food choices? Simply stated, because
it’s good for business. Americans are trying everything from
the newest weight loss pill to Weight Watchers to lose their
extra fat, spending “…..more than $40 billion in 2004 on weight
control pills, gym memberships, diet plans and related foods,
estimates Marketdata Enterprises, which studies the weight loss
industry” (Source: cnn.com; 1-14-2005). Statistics from the
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) indicate that
80 percent of overweight individuals and almost 87 percent of
obese individuals are trying to lose or maintain their
weight.
Any fast foods company that’s paying attention to public
sentiment and trends has made changes to make their menu more
palatable to the health and fitness enthusiast. McDonald’s,
long an industry leader, has made tremendous strides in this
area culminating in their recent announcement that all fast
food packaging will soon include nutritional information. But
have they gone far enough?
-> Fast Food = Fat Food:
No matter how many healthy new products are introduced onto
the fast food menu boards, the problem is that their core
products are high in fat and calories. Consider these typical
meals from McDonald’s:
* Big Mac, Large Fries, Large Coca-Cola, Hot Fudge Sundae
=
1,730 calories, 99% of daily fat, 108% of daily saturated fat,
86% of daily carbohydrates
* Chicken Selects Breast Strips (5 pc), Large Fries, Large
Coke, McFlurry with M+M’s Candies (12 oz.) =
2,290 calories, 151% of daily fat, 131% of daily saturated fat,
100% of daily carbohydrates
* Bacon Ranch Salad/Crispy Chicken, Newman’s Ranch Dressing,
Large Coke, McFlurry Oreo (12 oz.) =
1,390 calories, 73% of daily fat, 81% of daily saturated fat,
69% of daily carbohydrates
(Source: mcdonalds.com)
Some consumers, in an attempt to reduce the number of
calories and fat they’re eating, have opted for salads instead
of traditional burgers and fries. Unfortunately, some fast food
salads are almost as bad for us as a Big Mac. A California Cobb
salad with Newman’s Own Cobb Dressing from McDonald’s, for
example, boasts 490 calories and 42% of your daily fat. Compare
that to a Big Mac, which has 560 calories and 47% of your
recommended daily fat.
Although chastised in the movie ‘SuperSize Me’, McDonald’s
isn’t alone in offering high calories foods. The Original
Whopper with Cheese from Burger King will cost you 800 calories
and 49 grams of fat. Make that a Double Whopper with Cheese and
you’ll consume an incredible 1,060 calories and 69 grams of
fat. The Big Bacon Classic from Wendy’s is better with 580
calories and 29 grams of fat, while the Bacon Ultimate
Cheeseburger from Jack In The Box is the highest on the list
with 1,094 calories and a tremendous 78 grams of fat.
Clearly, high calorie fast food has become a problem. With
approximately 65% of Americans classified as overweight, people
are pointing fingers of blame. “In a lawsuit filed in 2002, two
Bronx teenagers accused McDonald's of making them fat by
serving them highly processed food that affected their health.
A judge tossed out the case a year later, but an appeals court
reinstated part of the suit earlier this year, according to
published reports.” (Source: cnn.com; 10-20-2005).
McDonald’s isn’t the only chain being accused of making
people fat. “A New York City lawyer has filed suit against the
four big fast-food corporations, saying their fatty foods are
responsible for his client’s obesity and related health
problems. Samuel Hirsch filed his lawsuit Wednesday at a New
York state court in the Bronx, alleging that McDonald’s, Burger
King, Wendy’s and KFC Corporation are irresponsible and
deceptive in the posting of their nutritional information, that
they need to offer healthier options on their menus, and that
they create a de facto addiction in their consumers” (Source:
foxnews.com; 7-24-2002).
The fast food industry initially responded by arguing that
customers have a choice of what to order when going to a
restaurant. "It's senseless, baseless and ridiculous," National
Restaurant Association spokeswoman Katharine Kim said. "There
are choices in restaurants and people can make these choices,
and there's a little personal responsibility as well." (Source:
foxnews.com; 7-24-2002).
Our elected officials seem to agree with that assessment.
“The U.S. House of Representatives passed a bill Wednesday that
would block lawsuits by people who blame fast-food chains for
their obesity. The ‘cheeseburger bill,’ as it has been dubbed
in Congress, stems from class-action litigation that accused
McDonald's of causing obesity in children” (Source: cnn.com;
10-20-2005). This bill is not yet law, having passed the House
but not yet the Senate. In the last Congress a similar bill
passed the House, but the Senate never acted on it. About 20
states have laws similar to the ‘cheeseburger bill’.
-> Fast Food Makes A Change:
To their credit, McDonald’s and some others in the fast food
industry have made changes to their menu making it easier for
us to stick to our diet program or weight loss plan.
McDonald’s allows consumers to substitute Apple Dippers with
Caramel Dip for the french fries in their meal, cutting
calories from 350 to 100 and reducing fat from 16 grams all the
way down to 1 gram (comparison vs. medium fries). McDonald’s
also allows a no-cost substitution of 1% milk instead of a
Coke, further cutting caloric intake by 50 calories and
boosting protein and calcium (comparison vs. small Coke
Classic).
Upon request, Burger King now provides Mott’s Strawberry
Flavored Applesauce in place of french fries which will save
you 270 calories and 18 grams of fat (comparison vs. medium
fries).
Wendy’s will honor customer requests to substitute mandarin
oranges for french fries, sparing you a belt-busting 360
calories and 21 grams of fat (comparison vs. medium fries).
Not only are the fast food giants allowing healthier
substitutions, but they have also added a selection of fairly
nutritious menu options. McDonald’s new Fruit & Walnut
Salad has only 310 calories and 13 grams of fat, while their
Fruit & Yogurt Parfait boasts 160 calories and 2 grams of
fat. In some markets Burger King is offering a Veggie Burger
that has only 340 calories and 8 grams of fat when you order it
without the mayonnaise.
Now McDonald’s has given consumers looking for fast weight
loss another tool: easy to read and easy to find nutritional
labels. In the past, customers wanting to find nutrition facts
on their fast food choices either had to search in the
restaurant for a hard-to-find poster or go online. Now, in what
is being called a ‘bold move’, McDonald’s is planning to put
these nutritional facts right where they’re easiest to find –
on the product wrapper itself. “McDonald's Corp. customers will
soon know that the Big Mac they bought contains almost half
their recommended daily fat intake just by looking at the
wrapper. In its latest measure to fend off critics that blame
the world's largest restaurant company for contributing to
rising incidents of obesity and other health problems,
McDonald's said it will start printing nutritional information
on the packaging of its food” (Source: cnn.com;
10-26-2005).
McDonald’s is to be commended for their efforts to educate
their customers. This new informative label goes a long way
towards answering nutritional concerns. Expected to be in most
stores by the end of 2006, the new labels will include the
amount of the nutrient (calories, fat, protein, etc.) and the
percentage of the daily recommended intake, based on a 2,000
calorie diet.
-> Is It Enough?
The fast food industry has heard the public asking for
healthier options and more nutritional information, and they
have responded. But it is enough?
McDonald’s and others still sell high calorie and high fat
products, and we shouldn’t expect those to disappear anytime
soon. In our free market, as long as there is a demand there
will be someone with a supply. “Data from USDA’s food intake
surveys show that the food-away-from-home sector provided 32
percent of total food energy consumption in 1994-96, up from 18
percent in 1977-78. The data also suggest that, when eating
out, people either eat more or eat higher calorie foods–or
both–and that this tendency appears to be increasing” (Source:
usda.gov).
Even with more information at their fingertips, there is
some doubt that consumers will actually use that information to
make healthier choices. Consider the limited impact from
warning labels on cigarettes and alcohol packaging; despite
such dire warnings, people still use these products. There is
evidence that Americans will continue to eat what they want, no
matter how much information they have available to them.
“According to a 2000 Roper Reports survey of a nationally
representative sample of 2,000 Americans 18 or older, the
percentage of Americans who say they are eating "pretty much
whatever they want" was at an all-time high of 70 percent in
2000, up from 58 percent in 1997” (Source: usda.gov).
The question of ‘is it enough’ seems to be misdirected.
Instead of asking the fast food industry to do more to educate
the public and offer healthy options, perhaps what we as a
country should do is ask ourselves if the information we have
right now is enough. If we look for it, is there enough health,
fitness and nutritional information out there to help us make
the right dietary choices? As uncomfortable as it may be for
some, the answer to this question is probably yes.
-> The Overlooked Answer:
All too often, when participating in a discussion of diet
and weight control, we fail to mention the most obvious answer:
exercise! Consistent exercise can balance out and make up for
the occasional high calorie fast food meal, while at the same
time providing countless other health benefits.
Exercise is the only path to quick weight loss that
virtually every doctor in the world agrees upon. Exercise is
safe, effective, and brings many more benefits to our lives
than nutrition labels ever will alone. Exercise is fun,
invigorating, motivating and the single most powerful way to
improve our life and well-being.
Reaching your ideal weight via a healthy and active
lifestyle has been found to lower health risks and medical
problems in 90 percent of overweight patients. In addition to
the exercise benefits listed above, fit people are eight times
less likely to die from cancer than the unfit, and 53 percent
less likely to die from other diseases. Fit people are also
eight times less likely to die from heart disease.
Yes, nutrition labels are important insofar as we actually
use them. But without a doubt, regular exercise is the most
important piece of the puzzle and the best way to achieve rapid
weight loss. Exercise is the safest way to achieve permanent
fat loss, and when combined with a sound diet and nutrition
program the body is turned into a virtual fat-burning
furnace!
Consumers would be wise to use the new tools from the fast
food industry. Order the healthier items off the menu, pay
attention to the nutritional labels, and above all else
remember to participate in regular exercise.
For more free weight loss information and weight loss
tips, go to www.letspickupthepace.com
and click on the ‘Articles’ link.
* The information in this article and on this site is for
general reference purposes only and not intended to address
specific medical conditions. This information is not a
substitute for professional medical advice or a medical exam.
Prior to participating in any exercise program or activity, you
should seek the advice of your physician or other qualified
health professional. No information in this article or
on www.letspickupthepace.com
should be used to diagnose, treat,
cure or prevent any medical condition.
Tracie Johanson is the founder of Pick Up The Pace, a 30-minute
exercise studio for women, focusing on fitness, health and
nutrition for maximum weight loss. Please
visit http://www.letspickupthepace.com
for more information.
Article Source: http://EzineArticles.com/
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