Every January we make the best resolutions with all the right intentions to succeed. This year set your sights on making one small change that will make a big difference between success and failure.
Invest in yourself and your good health for life and buy a Diet Plate! By using it each evening instead of your regular plate, you will rebalance the nutrition on your plate, lose the unwanted weight and control your Type 2 diabetes if you have it. The Diet Plate and breakfast/soup bowl counts the calories for you just at the glance of an eye by simply following the design.
There is no need for you to count calories, sins, points, drop food groups or cook anything different to what you normally enjoy. It is simple, a durable product, it is a one off purchase that can make a huge difference to your health and waistline educating you about weight management as you use it.
A customer bought a plate and bowl last April, having spoken to her in November to ask how it was going she informed me that she has lost 5 stone 3lbs to date and was very excited as she was applying for IVF treatment for a baby and now fits all the criteria to be accepted on to the programme. The Diet Plate can change your life – try it.
As inventor of The Diet Plate the worlds first portion control plate, my journey of how it all came about.
Monday, January 19, 2009
Thursday, January 15, 2009
Obesity: whose responsibility?

An article By Dr Ian Campbell
Few can have failed to notice that being fat is now at the top of the medical, and political agendas. Twenty-five percent of UK adults are now classified as obese, with another forty-two percent being overweight. Doctors have been getting excited about this for years, government has been slowly catching on, and now, finally, the public is starting to take notice themselves. A conversational subject once confined to women’s diet clubs is now being talked about in the workplace, the pub, the classroom, and around the dinner table.
Carrying too much weight doesn’t feel good. It might not look good either. And it certainly doesn’t improve your performance at work, in the field, or the office, or at home. An obese man has four times the risk of heart disease; an obese woman a twelve-fold risk of type 2 diabetes. The biggest preventable cause of cancer, after smoking, is obesity, and if you die of an obesity related disease you’re dying on average nine years too early. Obesity costs the NHS around £3.5 billion annually.
So what can be done about it? The 2007 Foresight Report called for more action to prevent, and treat obesity, at schools, at work, and at home. They promised a number of innovative measures to reduce the likelihood of our population continuing to gain weight. This year has seen the launch of the exciting new public health campaign from the Department of Health, called Change4Life, encouraging us all to start making those simple changes that can make all the difference. As the maxim goes, if you want a job done well, do it yourself. While national programmes are constructed to help us all, it still falls to us as individuals to try and help ourselves, to rise up to the challenge of our personal responsibility. It’s said that an apple a day keeps the doctor away; a little weight loss can achieve the same result. Being active at every opportunity, reducing alcohol, fat and sugar intake, and reducing our food portion sizes can go a long way to addressing the problem. There has never been a better time to start a healthier lifestyle, and reap a lifetime of benefit. More than ever, we owe it to ourselves. Come on, let’s do it! Start making those changes now, and keep those Changes4Life.
Dr Ian W Campbell
Labels:
Diabetes Mellitus,
Dr Ian Campbell,
NHS,
obese,
overweight,
type 2 diabetes,
Weight
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