Fat Camp for Grown-Ups: Can a Weight-Loss Retreat Help You Shed Pounds?

fat-camp-adults Five years ago, Juli Ackerman never thought she’d be able to buy an off-the-rack wedding dress. At 5 feet 10 inches, the software-company executive from Newport, Calif., then 40, was 280 pounds. Her weight had always fluctuated, but she decided that she wanted to slim down once and for all.

She stumbled upon the website of Hilton Head Health, a self-billed “weight loss spa retreat center” in South Carolina, and signed up. “I went there not knowing much about what I was in for,” she says. “I didn’t want to get pampered; I wanted to get healthy.”

Weight-loss retreats, spas, and resorts for adults—the grown-up version of fat camps—have been around for decades. But now, fueled by growing awareness of the health risks of obesity and the popularity of weight-loss shows such as The Biggest Loser, they seem to be on the rise. But do they work?

Yes, according to Ackerman. After two weeks of swimming and fitness classes, she lost 11 pounds. “It was a great jump start for me,” says Ackerman, who returned to Hilton Head Health twice and went on to lose more than 100 pounds. Last year, she was married on the beach; she weighed 165 pounds and was a trim and confident size 12.


But as they say in Jenny Craig ads, “Results not typical.” Experts caution that these retreats aren’t for everyone and don’t always work. The weight loss may not last, and it may not be worth the cost, which can be as high as several thousand dollars a week.

Nicole McLaren, a 26-year-old student from Washington, D.C., signed up for a monthlong stay at Hilton Head, hoping to shed 30 pounds. She lasted just two weeks before throwing in the towel in July 2007.

“I had this whole concept in my head of The Biggest Loser,” she says, referring to the intense (and compulsory) training the contestants get. That wasn’t what she found when she arrived. “Everything was optional, so a lot of people just sat around and talked about losing weight,” she says. “The only thing you had to stick to was [that] they portioned your food to about 1,200 calories a day.”

The structured environment, exercise classes, and prepared meals had sounded promising, but the $2,400-a-week price tag seemed too high when she found meals were limited to one option, she had to share a room with strangers, and the exercise classes were geared toward the resort’s older clients. “I think I lost eight pounds, but that’s only because they starve you,” McLaren says. “When I left, all I wanted to do was eat!”

“Weight-loss camps are not an easy or quick fix,” says Jennifer Hester, a sports exercise and education researcher at Leeds Metropolitan University, in the U.K. “The short-term investment of time and money does not automatically equate to healthy weight management in the long term.”

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Fight Cellulite Fast With Yoga

yoga-cellulite You’re really not sure how it happened, but one day you looked in the mirror and there it was—cellulite, creeping up on your legs and butt just in time for swimsuit season. Happily, there’s a speedy way to smooth those bumps and lumps: Yoga.

We asked New York City–based yoga and Pilates instructor and Health Expert Network pro Kristin McGee, star of fitness DVDs MTV Power Yoga and the new Weight Loss Pilates, to create a cellulite-busting routine that targets the butt and thighs, the areas most prone to dimpling.

Thanks to all those days spent sitting, fat pushes through weakened spots in the connective tissue beneath skin. But rebuilding muscle tone in those trouble spots and burning excess fat can help smooth out cellulite and prevent future dimpling, McGee says.

Do this 20-minute sequence three days a week—plus 30 minutes of vigorous cardio, four times a week—and you’ll see smoother skin in just six weeks. View slideshow

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Health's Feel Great Weight Plan: Practice Portion Control

This handy chart is part of Health magazine's Feel Great Weight Plan: Your What-to-Eat Guide.

From breakfast to dessert, here’s your complete eating strategy. To keep weight off, keep these quick guidelines in mind.
A serving of...is about equivalent to this...Palm of your hand plus up to your knuckle (5 oz)Your entire hand and as thick as your thumb at the knuckle (6 oz)

Download this chart (pdf).


Download our Feel Great Weight Substitution Chart (pdf).

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Welcome to Health's Feel Great Weight Program


Our mission: to help you find your own personal Feel Great Weight. What do we mean by that? It’s not what you weighed when you fit into those ridiculously tiny jeans you wore in high school. Rather, it’s that happy, healthy, sane number you can actually maintain. Sure, it’ll take some work to get there, but the work is doable—and even fun—thanks to the insider info and support from the dream team of experts who put our plan together. They’ll guide you from every angle: what to eat, how to work out more efficiently, even how to dress for your changing body. What’s more, for the rest of the year, the dream team will offer new tips and encouragement each month as you follow the plan in Health magazine and on Health.com. Plus, you’ll see the transformations of three lucky readers who’ve signed up to follow the plan and finally get the bodies they want). Isn’t it time you said yes to feeling great? OK, then, let’s go!
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Fit at Any Age: Your 40s Strength Workout

Fit at Any Age: Your 40s Strength Workout - Diet Fitness - Health.com S
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for hamstrings, butt, abs, lower back
Stand holding a dumbbell in each hand, palms facing in. Step your left foot back so your toes are just touching the floor. Tilt forward at your hips so the weights hang toward the floor, with your back parallel to the floor and left foot raised to hip height; return to starting position. Do 10 reps, then switch sides and repeat.

Balancing Biceps Curls
for biceps, abs, legs
Stand with a dumbbell in each hand, palms facing in, and left knee raised to hip height. Bend your elbows (but don’t move them forward or back) and bring the weights up to your shoulders; lower your hands to complete the rep. Do 8 reps, then switch legs and repeat.

Bent-Arm Lateral Raises
for quads, abs, shoulders
Sit on an exercise ball with feet shoulder-width apart. Hold a dumbbell in each hand, with arms down by your sides, elbows bent, and palms facing in. Lift your left foot 2 inches off the floor. Then lift your elbows so the weights are at shoulder height, and slowly lower them back down. Do 8 reps, switch legs, and repeat.

Push-Ups on Ball
for triceps, abs
Rest your torso on an exercise ball and walk your hands forward on the floor so your body is in plank position, with your shins on top of the ball and hands on the floor below your shoulders. Slowly bend elbows back, lowering your chest toward the floor in a push-up, then straighten your arms. Do 8 reps.

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Walk Off Weight: The Simplest Diet Ever


We love the flexibility of this plan from Dawn Jackson Blatner, RD. It’s supersimple to remember, nothing’s off limits, and it’s a snap to do on the go. Just allow yourself 300 calories for breakfast, 400 for lunch, and 500 for dinner, plus two 150-calorie snacks, for a total of 1,500 calories a day. (Go to www.thecaloriecounter.com for the calorie counts of most foods.) Make it healthy and filling by working in lots of fruit, veggies, and whole grains.

Here’s a sample day:

Breakfast
1 cup yogurt
1 cup strawberries
1 low-calorie granola bar
1 cup coffee with 1 teaspoon of sugar
294 calories

Lunch
Half a turkey sandwich
1 cup garden-vegetable soup
1 cup fresh fruit
unsweetened iced tea
390 calories

Afternoon snack
15 light tortilla chips
1/2 cup salsa
146 calories

Dinner
1 roasted skinless chicken breast drizzled with balsamic vinegar
8 grilled asparagus spears
2 roasted red potatoes sprinkled with 2 tablespoons grated Parmesan cheese
520 calories

Evening snack
1/2 cup light chocolate ice cream
1/4 cup raspberries
146 calories

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I Lost 72 Pounds Without a Diet

weight-loss In January 2007, my friends and I were making resolutions. Mine was to lose a few pounds—no big deal. I’d always been chubby but thought I “carried it well.” I didn’t know how wrong I was: when I stepped on the scale, it read 242 pounds. I was heavier than some football players!

The next day, I hit the gym. I managed to find a treadmill behind a pole, so nobody could see me work out. To avoid feeling self-conscious, I started going to the gym at odd hours (like 3 a.m.!) and tried different routines like Spinning, weight lifting, yoga, and cycling. And I used a Polar heart-rate monitor to push myself to burn more calories.
weight-loss
Dieting was a real challenge. As an information-technology consultant, I'm constantly traveling (more than 200 nights a year), and I relied on fast food and chocolate cake to comfort me after long days. Since my job makes eating out inevitable, I needed to make better choices. I started asking for meats grilled, without sauce or cheese, and salad dressing on the side. I also kept healthy snacks like Larabars in my carry-on and tracked my calorie count (1,500 per day) online, so I wouldn’t overindulge or deprive myself.

After 11 months, I lost 72 pounds. I’m now thinner and healthier than I was in high school!

From size 20 to slim timeline

242 lbs: January 2007-Went to the
gym for the first time in forever.
220 lbs: April 2007-Using a heart-rate monitor for motivation works.
190 lbs: July 2007-Dropped more than 50 lbs—the weight of my dog, Bailey.
175 lbs: October 2007-Completed my first triathlon. What a rush!
170 lbs: Now–I've kept it off for two-and-a-half years!

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How the Pros Curb Food Cravings

How the Pros Curb Food Cravings - Health.com S
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prev1 of 11nextCurb cravings for good

By Kate Stinchfield

Trying to kick your unhealthy food cravings to the curb? These fresh strategies from the pros will help.

Next: Plan on giving in

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5-Minute Fat Burners

5-Minute Fat Burners - Health.com S
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prev1 of 19nextWinter workouts

By Su Reid-St. John
From Health magazine

No time to work out? No problem! Slip in these calorie blasters and you’re done.

Next: Jump

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