Lose weight without dieting Empty your pockets shed some layers
When Dan Zukowski weighs in at his doctors office, the nurse has been known to chuckle.
A nurse told me Im worse than the girls, Zukowski said.
Zukowski empties his pockets, kicks off his shoes, removes as many outer layers as he can without making it uncomfortable and even discards his work name tag.
They needed a chair for me to sit all my stuff on, Zukowski said.
The 47-year-old Puyallup resident used to approach doctors appointment weigh-ins with nonchalance. Hed leave his shoes on and wouldnt even put down the magazine he was reading in the waiting room.
Hes not alone.
Many people and, yes, most of them are men, according to local health and fitness experts are weighing in heavier than they should.
Ive seen men carry up to 5 pounds of extra weight in their pockets in the form of change, keys, cellphones, etc., said Chelsey Lindahl, a MultiCare registered dietitian.
While health care professionals say these inaccuracies are almost always unimportant, they can bother patients.
During a visit last year, Zukowski looked at his recorded height and weight and then searched a chart for his body mass index. It said he was overweight.
How could this be? He is fit and exercises daily. He was running 100 miles per month while training for the Tacoma City Marathon. He biked to work. And he was the reigning champion of his local Turkey Trot.
He asked his doctor, who told him not to worry. Clearly he was in great shape. The BMI scale is somewhat arbitrary when it lumps everybody with a score of 25 or higher into the overweight category and is notorious for placing fit people outside the normal range.
BMI is a great tool for the general population, but not as much for very fitness-minded folks, said Dr. Mark Mariani, director of MultiCares orthopedics and sports medicine.
Even less so when those fit people get weighed with their shoes on and full pockets.
Despite assurances from his doctor, Zukowski was annoyed that his BMI was high. I dont want to have anything associated with me saying Im overweight, he said.
So a year later a 3-hour, 46-minute marathon and another Turkey Trot title under his belt Zukowski now sheds as much as he can when he weighs in for his annual physical.
And this, health experts says, is a good approach for everybody, but not as important as being consistent about the way you weigh in.
MultiCare and Franciscan Health System both say they have guidelines for weighing in. Still, in many cases, its up to the patient to decide exactly what does and doesnt go on the scale.
There is very limited clinical value the majority of the time to see a 1- to 2-pound difference, Mariani said. Even in the situations where there is clinical sensitivity to a 1-2 pound difference (heart failure is a good example), the key thing then is measuring in a consistent fashion from visit to visit. The key information is not the total weight, but the change in weight.
Several months ago I decided to see just how much I could get away with at the scale during a doctors appointment.
First, I weighed myself at home. Naked (sorry if I just ruined your breakfast), I weighed in at 179 pounds. That gave me a BMI of 24.3. Normal.
Then I put on wool socks, sunglasses, my hiking boots, heavy jeans, a sweater, a hat and a down jacket and grabbed a magazine and a 32-ounce bottle of water. Now I weighed 191 pounds and was overweight with a BMI of 25.9.
I wore all of this as I stepped on the scale in the doctors office. The nurse didnt say a word.
I cant say I blame her. The scale is a source of stress for many people of all shapes and sizes.
Some patients even refuse to be weighed, said Scott Thompson, a spokesman for Franciscan Health System. At its new clinics, Franciscan has scales built into the exam tables.
This way the patient can be weighed as soon as they sit down on the table without the angst of getting on the scale, Thompson said.
So what is the right way to weigh in?
Patients should be certain to empty their pockets, slip off shoes, and remove heavy outer clothing, Lindahl said. Its also a good idea to wear lightweight clothing if possible.
And dont get too worked up about the number that pops up on the scale. This is more of a ballpark figure, said Dr. Joshua Purses of MultiCare Orthopedics and Sports Medicine.
It is probably more important that the patient keep track of their weight on a scale at home and that they always do it at the same time of day and same method (in underwear or naked, whatever they typically do) so they can keep track of weight gains and losses, Purses said.
But if youre still bothered by what you see on the scale, you can dig deeper, said Lisa Lovejoy, MultiCares registered sports dietitian.
A body composition test will tell you precisely what youre made of. A BMI that says youre overweight doesnt mean youre overfat, Lovejoy said.
My son is 5-foot-10 and 180 pounds (a BMI of 25.8, overweight), Lovejoy said. But when I put him in the Bod Pod (a devise that measures body composition) his body fat is only 11 percent.
A Bod Pod test costs $40 to $50, more than Zukowski is willing to pay to confirm something he and his doctors already know. But when he weighs in, he will continue to empty his pockets and remove layers.
A nurse told me Im worse than the girls, Zukowski said.
Zukowski empties his pockets, kicks off his shoes, removes as many outer layers as he can without making it uncomfortable and even discards his work name tag.
They needed a chair for me to sit all my stuff on, Zukowski said.
The 47-year-old Puyallup resident used to approach doctors appointment weigh-ins with nonchalance. Hed leave his shoes on and wouldnt even put down the magazine he was reading in the waiting room.
Hes not alone.
Many people and, yes, most of them are men, according to local health and fitness experts are weighing in heavier than they should.
Ive seen men carry up to 5 pounds of extra weight in their pockets in the form of change, keys, cellphones, etc., said Chelsey Lindahl, a MultiCare registered dietitian.
While health care professionals say these inaccuracies are almost always unimportant, they can bother patients.
During a visit last year, Zukowski looked at his recorded height and weight and then searched a chart for his body mass index. It said he was overweight.
How could this be? He is fit and exercises daily. He was running 100 miles per month while training for the Tacoma City Marathon. He biked to work. And he was the reigning champion of his local Turkey Trot.
He asked his doctor, who told him not to worry. Clearly he was in great shape. The BMI scale is somewhat arbitrary when it lumps everybody with a score of 25 or higher into the overweight category and is notorious for placing fit people outside the normal range.
BMI is a great tool for the general population, but not as much for very fitness-minded folks, said Dr. Mark Mariani, director of MultiCares orthopedics and sports medicine.
Even less so when those fit people get weighed with their shoes on and full pockets.
Despite assurances from his doctor, Zukowski was annoyed that his BMI was high. I dont want to have anything associated with me saying Im overweight, he said.
So a year later a 3-hour, 46-minute marathon and another Turkey Trot title under his belt Zukowski now sheds as much as he can when he weighs in for his annual physical.
And this, health experts says, is a good approach for everybody, but not as important as being consistent about the way you weigh in.
MultiCare and Franciscan Health System both say they have guidelines for weighing in. Still, in many cases, its up to the patient to decide exactly what does and doesnt go on the scale.
There is very limited clinical value the majority of the time to see a 1- to 2-pound difference, Mariani said. Even in the situations where there is clinical sensitivity to a 1-2 pound difference (heart failure is a good example), the key thing then is measuring in a consistent fashion from visit to visit. The key information is not the total weight, but the change in weight.
Several months ago I decided to see just how much I could get away with at the scale during a doctors appointment.
First, I weighed myself at home. Naked (sorry if I just ruined your breakfast), I weighed in at 179 pounds. That gave me a BMI of 24.3. Normal.
Then I put on wool socks, sunglasses, my hiking boots, heavy jeans, a sweater, a hat and a down jacket and grabbed a magazine and a 32-ounce bottle of water. Now I weighed 191 pounds and was overweight with a BMI of 25.9.
I wore all of this as I stepped on the scale in the doctors office. The nurse didnt say a word.
I cant say I blame her. The scale is a source of stress for many people of all shapes and sizes.
Some patients even refuse to be weighed, said Scott Thompson, a spokesman for Franciscan Health System. At its new clinics, Franciscan has scales built into the exam tables.
This way the patient can be weighed as soon as they sit down on the table without the angst of getting on the scale, Thompson said.
So what is the right way to weigh in?
Patients should be certain to empty their pockets, slip off shoes, and remove heavy outer clothing, Lindahl said. Its also a good idea to wear lightweight clothing if possible.
And dont get too worked up about the number that pops up on the scale. This is more of a ballpark figure, said Dr. Joshua Purses of MultiCare Orthopedics and Sports Medicine.
It is probably more important that the patient keep track of their weight on a scale at home and that they always do it at the same time of day and same method (in underwear or naked, whatever they typically do) so they can keep track of weight gains and losses, Purses said.
But if youre still bothered by what you see on the scale, you can dig deeper, said Lisa Lovejoy, MultiCares registered sports dietitian.
A body composition test will tell you precisely what youre made of. A BMI that says youre overweight doesnt mean youre overfat, Lovejoy said.
My son is 5-foot-10 and 180 pounds (a BMI of 25.8, overweight), Lovejoy said. But when I put him in the Bod Pod (a devise that measures body composition) his body fat is only 11 percent.
A Bod Pod test costs $40 to $50, more than Zukowski is willing to pay to confirm something he and his doctors already know. But when he weighs in, he will continue to empty his pockets and remove layers.