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Calorie Rule of Thumb(s)

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Found some interesting items in a Dr.Donohue column over the weekend

for those that wonder about caloric intake in a general way. The

idea here is to estimate the calories necessary to maintain your body

weight....more than the number adds on storage; less than goes in the

negative column...but no equity.

Moderately active male:

Multiply current weight by 19 (ex. 150# x 19 = 2850 cal. intake)

Moderately active female:

Multiply current weight by 17 (ex. 130# x 17 = 2210 cal. intake)

" Moderately active " is a key phrase.

Another formula says to multiply the weight in pounds by 10 and then

add 50 percent more of that number to obtain a daily target for

calorie intake. The example here would be a 150 pounder would be

able to consume 2250 calories a day (150 x 10 = 1500; 1500 x 0.5 =

750 + 1500 - 2250)

Athletes are allowed to intake about 50 calories for every 2.2 pounds

of body weight. A 150 pounder is allowed 3400 calories per day with

vigorous activity.

To quote the Doc on this one for the rest of article:

" If you are a true scientist, go about weight loss by first

purchasing a calorie counter. For one week, keep a record of each

day's calorie intake. If you weight stays the same throughout that

week, you then known how many calories maintain your present weight.

To lose weight, reduce your daily calorie intake by 500 calories.

That ought to pare off one pound of body weight in one week. That

sounds like a discouragingly littel amount of weight to lose. It is

not. It's a safe amount to lose, and it's a loss that's easy to

maintain since the diet is not so off-the-wall. "

Dan

rny 10.13.98

EdWaits,MD-Atlanta

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Ahhhhh, to be a normie. If only this had applied (or would apply to me

today). If I ate that much, I'd weight that much....

Thanks,

http://www.vitalady.com

For info on PayPal, click this link:

https://secure.paypal.com/affil/pal=vitalady%40bigfoot.com

Calorie Rule of Thumb(s)

> Found some interesting items in a Dr.Donohue column over the weekend

> for those that wonder about caloric intake in a general way. The

> idea here is to estimate the calories necessary to maintain your body

> weight....more than the number adds on storage; less than goes in the

> negative column...but no equity.

>

> Moderately active male:

> Multiply current weight by 19 (ex. 150# x 19 = 2850 cal. intake)

> Moderately active female:

> Multiply current weight by 17 (ex. 130# x 17 = 2210 cal. intake)

>

> " Moderately active " is a key phrase.

>

> Another formula says to multiply the weight in pounds by 10 and then

> add 50 percent more of that number to obtain a daily target for

> calorie intake. The example here would be a 150 pounder would be

> able to consume 2250 calories a day (150 x 10 = 1500; 1500 x 0.5 =

> 750 + 1500 - 2250)

>

> Athletes are allowed to intake about 50 calories for every 2.2 pounds

> of body weight. A 150 pounder is allowed 3400 calories per day with

> vigorous activity.

>

>

> To quote the Doc on this one for the rest of article:

>

> " If you are a true scientist, go about weight loss by first

> purchasing a calorie counter. For one week, keep a record of each

> day's calorie intake. If you weight stays the same throughout that

> week, you then known how many calories maintain your present weight.

> To lose weight, reduce your daily calorie intake by 500 calories.

> That ought to pare off one pound of body weight in one week. That

> sounds like a discouragingly littel amount of weight to lose. It is

> not. It's a safe amount to lose, and it's a loss that's easy to

> maintain since the diet is not so off-the-wall. "

>

> Dan

> rny 10.13.98

> EdWaits,MD-Atlanta

>

>

> Homepage: http://groups.yahoo.com/group/Graduate-OSSG

>

> Unsubscribe: mailto:Graduate-OSSG-unsubscribe

>

>

>

>

>

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In a message dated 3/29/2002 9:09:03 AM Pacific Standard Time,

vitalady@... writes:

> Ahhhhh, to be a normie. If only this had applied (or would apply to me

> today). If I ate that much, I'd weight that much....

>

> Thanks,

>

>

> http://www.vitalady.com

>

>

> For info on PayPal, click this link:

> https://secure.paypal.com/affil/pal=vitalady%40bigfoot.com

>

>

> Calorie Rule of Thumb(s)

>

>

> > Found some interesting items in a Dr.Donohue column over the weekend

> > for those that wonder about caloric intake in a general way. The

> > idea here is to estimate the calories necessary to maintain your body

> > weight....more than the number adds on storage; less than goes in the

> > negative column...but no equity.

> >

> > Moderately active male:

> > Multiply current weight by 19 (ex. 150# x 19 = 2850 cal. intake)

> > Moderately active female:

> > Multiply current weight by 17 (ex. 130# x 17 = 2210 cal. intake)

>

No kidding! I don't count calories, but I figure about 10 calories per pound

(that you'd like to weigh) is more like normal healthy weight folks that

don't do a bunch of exercise but are not bed bound. Most days I would say I

eat around 1200 to 1600 calories . . . I would hate to have to eat a bunch

more to maintain my weight.

:o) Vicki

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See http://www.drkoop.com/tools/calculator for calculators on how much

carbohydrates and protein they recommend for you.

Ray Hooks

For WLS nutrition info, visit

http://www.bariatricsupplementsystem.com

softplan11 wrote:

>

> Found some interesting items in a Dr.Donohue column over the weekend

> for those that wonder about caloric intake in a general way. The

> idea here is to estimate the calories necessary to maintain your body

> weight....more than the number adds on storage; less than goes in the

> negative column...but no equity.

>

> Moderately active male:

> Multiply current weight by 19 (ex. 150# x 19 = 2850 cal. intake)

> Moderately active female:

> Multiply current weight by 17 (ex. 130# x 17 = 2210 cal. intake)

>

> " Moderately active " is a key phrase.

>

> Another formula says to multiply the weight in pounds by 10 and then

> add 50 percent more of that number to obtain a daily target for

> calorie intake. The example here would be a 150 pounder would be

> able to consume 2250 calories a day (150 x 10 = 1500; 1500 x 0.5 =

> 750 + 1500 - 2250)

>

> Athletes are allowed to intake about 50 calories for every 2.2 pounds

> of body weight. A 150 pounder is allowed 3400 calories per day with

> vigorous activity.

>

> To quote the Doc on this one for the rest of article:

>

> " If you are a true scientist, go about weight loss by first

> purchasing a calorie counter. For one week, keep a record of each

> day's calorie intake. If you weight stays the same throughout that

> week, you then known how many calories maintain your present weight.

> To lose weight, reduce your daily calorie intake by 500 calories.

> That ought to pare off one pound of body weight in one week. That

> sounds like a discouragingly littel amount of weight to lose. It is

> not. It's a safe amount to lose, and it's a loss that's easy to

> maintain since the diet is not so off-the-wall. "

>

> Dan

> rny 10.13.98

> EdWaits,MD-Atlanta

>

> Homepage: http://groups.yahoo.com/group/Graduate-OSSG

>

> Unsubscribe: mailto:Graduate-OSSG-unsubscribe

>

>

>

>

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