The Obesity Code Cookbook. Jason Fung
know how to treat the obe-
sity. Despite having worked for more than ten years in medicine, I found
that my nutritional knowledge was rudimentary, at best. This realization
sparked a decade-long odyssey and eventually led me to establish the
Intensive Dietary Management (IDM) program (www.IDMprogram.com)
and the Toronto Metabolic Clinic (www.torontometabolicclinic.com).
Obesity
Medical Treatment
Metabolic Syndrome
Type 2 Diabetes
Heart Attacks
Stroke
Cancer
Kidney Disease
Blindness
Amputation
Nerve Damage
( 13 )
introduction
Thinking seriously about the treatment of obesity, I realized there
was one singularly important question to understand: What causes
weight gain? That is, what is the root cause of weight gain and obesity?
The reason we never think about this crucial question is that we think
we already know the answer. We think that eating too many calories
causes obesity. If this were true, then the solution to weight loss would
be simple: Eat fewer calories.
Figure 2: A More Effective Paradigm of Medical Treatment
But we’ve done that already. Ad nauseam. For the last forty years, the
only weight-loss advice has been to cut your calories and exercise more.
This is the highly ineffective strategy called Eat Less, Move More. We
have calorie counts on every food label. We have calorie-counting books.
We have calorie-counting apps. We have calorie counters on our exercise
machines. We’ve done everything humanly possible to count calories so
that we could cut them. Has it worked? Have those pounds melted like a
snowman in July? No. It sure sounds like it should work. But the empir-
ical evidence, plain as a mole on the tip of your nose, is that it does not
work.
From a human physiology standpoint, the entire calorie story col-
lapses like a house of cards when you look closely at it. The body does
not respond to “calories.” There are no calorie receptors on cell surfaces.
The body has no ability to know how many calories you are eating or
Obesity
Medical
Treatment
Metabolic Syndrome
Type 2 Diabetes
Heart Attacks
Stroke
Cancer
Kidney Disease
Blindness
Amputation
Nerve Damage
( 14 )
THE OBESITY CODE COOKBOOK
not eating. If your body doesn’t count calories, why should you? A calo-
rie is purely a unit of energy borrowed from physics. The field of obesity
medicine, desperate for some simple measure of food energy, completely
ignored human physiology and turned to physics instead.
“A calorie is a calorie” soon became the statement du jour. It also gave
rise to a question: Are all calories of food energy equally fattening? The
answer to that is an emphatic no. One hundred calories of kale salad are
not as fattening as one hundred calories of candy. One hundred calories
of beans are not as fattening as one hundred calories of white bread and
jam. But for the last forty years, we have believed that all calories are
equally fattening.
And that’s why I wrote The Obesity Code. In that book, I drew on what
I learned over ten years of helping thousands of patients lose weight
through my Intensive Dietary Management program. Nutrition is the
key to metabolism, the process of breaking down food molecules to
provide energy (calories) for the body and using that energy to build,
maintain, and repair body tissues and allow the body to function effi-
ciently. To answer the all-important question—what are the underlying
causes of weight gain?—I started at the beginning, unraveled the calories
model, and explained what’s really going on: Obesity is a hormonal, not
a caloric, imbalance. And what we eat and when we eat are two major
influences on our ability to manage weight gain and weight loss.
Insulin
In our body, nothing happens by accident. Every single physiological
process is a tight orchestration of hormonal signals. Whether our heart
beats faster or slower is tightly controlled by hormones. Whether we
urinate a lot or a little is tightly controlled by hormones. Whether the
calories we eat are burned as energy or stored as body fat is also tightly
controlled by hormones. So, the main problem in terms of obesity is not
the number of calories we eat, but how they are spent. And the main
hormone we need to know about is insulin.
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introduction
Insulin is a fat-storing hormone. There’s nothing wrong with that—
that’s simply its job. When we eat, insulin production goes up, signaling
the body to store some food energy as body fat. When we don’t eat, insu-
lin production goes down, signaling the body to burn the stored energy
(body fat). Higher-than-usual insulin levels tell our body to store more
food energy as body fat.
Everything about human metabolism, including body weight,
depends upon hormonal signaling. A critical physiological variable such
as body fatness is not left up to the vagaries of daily caloric intake and
exercise. If early humans were too fat, they could not easily run and
catch prey,