By K. Aleisha Fetters
Each year comes with its own unique brand of health trends. Some wind
up being passing fad diets, while others prove surprisingly on point.
The key to healthy living is knowing which trends are worth your time.
To that end, here are the year's shape-up and slim-down trends we'd like
to forget -- and the ones we hope will stick around into 2014.
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Best: Water workouts
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Whatever your favorite workout -- be it Zumba,
spinning, yoga or jogging -- you can now probably do it in a pool near
you. And it's not just for show. By getting your sweat on in the water,
you eliminate the joint-jolting and tiring impact of many exercises
while adding all-over resistance for greater strength and weight-loss
gains, according to the Stockholm University College of Physical
Education and Sports. Bonus: People who do pool exercises enjoy their
workouts more than those who stick to dry land, per research from Baylor
University Medical Center.
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Best: Fun runs
Whether it involves running through foam-covered
obstacles or getting splattered with colored powder, fun runs have it
right: Fun is the ultimate motivator, according to Edward L. Deci,
Ph.D., a motivational researcher and professor of psychology at the
University of Rochester. People who work out for the pure joy of working
out rather than for a result (think: lose those last five pounds)
actually stick with workouts longer and reap better results, he says. So
grab your friends and sign up!
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Best: Going vegan
Somewhere between PETA's annual list of the sexiest vegan celebs and renowned food writer Mark Bittman's VB6: Eat Vegan Before 6:00 to Lose Weight and Restore Your Health... for Good,
2013 became the year of the vegan. Vegans tend to be thinner and have
lower cholesterol and blood pressure than omnivores and vegetarians
alike, according to a 2009 review in the American Journal of Clinical
Nutrition. If you want to try an animal-product-free lifestyle -- even
just part time -- make sure you get enough protein daily, advises
Martica Heaner Ph.D., a nutritionist and exercise physiologist based in
New York City.
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Best: Hybrid yoga
Ropes, hula-hoops, kickboxing moves and even
trampolines made their way into the yoga studio this year -- and the
combination caters to more than your attention span, says Melissa
diLeonardo, an American Council on Exercise-certified personal trainer
and a Life Fitness Master Trainer. By integrating non-yoga moves into
your routine, you can train a wider variety of muscles for better
total-body sculpting.
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Best: Bike-sharing programs
Now, in dozens of cities across the United
States, exercise can actually save you time. So bypass traffic and get a
bike pass: One four-year study of 822 adults found that bike commuters
gain less weight over the years than car commuters. Besides toning your
legs, increasing your heart rate, and strengthening your core, biking
can seriously boost your energy. One study in Psychotherapy and
Psychosomatics found that biking decreases fatigue by 65 percent.
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Best: Playground workouts
Girls (even grown ones) just want to have fun! And playground workouts -- from
adult playground fitness parks across California to the jungle gym-inspired
Synrgy360
stations in gyms -- are designed to help them have just that. "As
adults, we just don't play enough. Play is good for your body and mind.
These workouts give us an opportunity to let loose and explore new ways
of burning calories while having fun," diLeonardo says. Plus, with bars
for climbing, ropes for pulling, and platforms for jumping, playground
workouts strengthen your entire body through natural, multi-joint
exercises to improve your fitness both in and out of the gym.
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Best: Exercise-specific footwear
Shoe fanatics, rejoice! Now stores stock
Zumba, indoor cycling and even
CrossFit shoes
-- and they do more than make you look like a pro. "Footwear designed
for specific activities can help improve performance and provide
additional support when executing certain movement patterns," diLeonardo
says. For example, shoes designed for dance-inspired classes generally
have more lateral support and less tread so you don't twist your knee
mid-spin. If you are starting a new class, talk to your instructor about
the right footwear for the exercises involved.
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Best: Intermittent fasting
The Fast Diet,
The IF Diet and
The 5:2 Diet
might sound like gimmicks, and they are definitely unintuitive, but a
2013 review in the British Journal of Diabetes and Vascular Disease
suggests that fasting diets not only aid in weight loss but actually may
help people with cardiovascular disease by
decreasing inflammation,
reducing blood pressure and improving blood sugar and triglyceride
levels. The key is following a healthy protocol, as some can lead to a
binge-purge mentality, says dietician Alexandra Caspero, RD, owner of
weight-management and sports-nutrition service delicious-knowledge. She
advises talking to a nutritionist or healthcare provider to find the one
that's right for you.
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Worst: Open-bar gyms
Increasingly
more gyms are serving their cool-down with a side of spirits:
Finish a class and you get an all-you-can-drink pass. "Alcohol during
or following an exercise class is a definite no in my book," says
diLeonardo, who emphasizes the need to drink water, not alcohol. Why?
According to one study in the Journal of Applied Physiology, alcohol
drains your muscles' levels of glycogen, their primary source of fuel.
The effect: Your muscles don't have the energy they need to repair, grow
stronger and increase your metabolism. Basically, post-exercise sips
negate your workout.
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Worst: The Whole30 Diet
As if the Paleo Diet wasn't strict or unsustainable enough, this year people turned to the
Whole30 Diet,
which is basically an extremist "caveman" plan. The month-long program
prohibits the consumption of fiber-filled legumes and whole grains,
calcium- and vitamin D-rich dairy and even some Paleo-approved foods
like coffee, alcohol and honey, all of which have been linked to
improved health and longevity, Caspero says. While the strict
plants-and-meat diet will surely spur weight loss by eliminating
unhealthy refined sugars, the diet is far from sustainable -- and isn't
designed to be that way. So what happens after the month ends? You
yo-yo. And while weight lost from extremely restricted diets is
typically from a combination of fat and lean tissues, weight regained is
typically 100 percent fat, she says.
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Worst: Hot classes
This year, hot Pilates, hot barre and even hot
weightlifting classes have joined Bikram yoga in cranking up the heat.
But for what? "You don't need the heat to get a good workout," says
diLeonardo. One 2013
American Council on Exercise study
found that increasing the temperature does not make you work any harder
or burn any more calories. All of the sweat just makes you think you
do, all while putting you at risk of dehydration, she says. Also, while
the ACE study found that temperatures of up to 95 degrees are safe for a
person with zero health issues, researchers warn that many classes turn
up the temps as high as 115 degrees.
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Worst: Going gluten-free for no reason
About one in three Americans are cutting down on
or completely eliminating gluten, per a 2013 survey from The NPD Group.
If you're one of them, read your nutrition labels. "Gluten-free foods
aren't automatically better for you, and plenty of them can make you
gain pounds" says Seattle-based certified nutritionist Deborah Enos.
"Gluten helps to hold food together. When food manufacturers remove
gluten, they add in fat and sugar to help the food maintain its shape."
Plus, a 2012 review in the Journal of the Academy of Nutrition and
Dietetics shows that a gluten-free diet has no benefit -- and can even
harm gut health -- in people without celiac disease or a gluten
intolerance.
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Worst: Vibration machines
Remember watching your mom jiggle her fat away
with vibrating belts? Well, the vibration fad is back, but this time you
stand on a pulsating platform to tone muscles, boost your metabolism,
and reduce cellulite... or not. In one International Journal of Sports
Medicine study, women who completed 24 weeks of whole-body vibration
training did not lose fat.
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Worst: Too-intense workouts
Pushing yourself is great. But pushing yourself
beyond your ability is counterproductive and dangerous. Unfortunately a
slew of workout classes and DVDs tout exhaustion as the ultimate goal,
sacrificing form for intensity and increasing your risk of injury, says
performance enhancement specialist Martin Rooney. What's more, when
working out at home to DVDs, it's challenging to know if you are keeping
form even before fatigue sets in. Before signing up for any
high-intensity interval classes (which we love!) or popping in a DVD,
develop proper form with a personal or small-group trainer.
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Worst: The Bulletproof Diet
An example of why you should read into who's behind your eating plan,
The Bulletproof Diet
wasn't drafted by an M.D. or nutritionist. It was designed by a Silicon
Valley investor and computer security professional who lost more than
100 pounds, according to the diet's website. While his personal weight
loss is certainly inspiring, it doesn't provide rock-solid scientific
evidence to support recommendations to eat 4,000-plus calories a day,
not exercise and scoop butter into their morning coffee. If it sounds
too good to be true, it probably is.
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