BY NICKY PERKS
HEALTH
VOLUME 30 LOSE IT! 13
ccording to advocates of
intermittent fasting (IF),
strategically skipping a meal
or two has a host of health
benefits: it lowers your diabetes
risk by decreasing insulin
resistance; enhances growth hormone production
(good for anti-ageing); and improves cognition
through the release of dopamine.
In short, IF is a way of eating that focuses
on when you eat instead of what you eat, and
involves going without food for a determined
period of time. One popular approach is the
16:8 fast, where you fast for 16 hours (say
between the hours of 7pm and 11am), and eat
within an eight-hour window. Then there is the
5:2 method, where you restrict your food intake
to about 500 calories for two days a week and
eat normally the other five days. Others prefer
a 24-hour fast once or twice a week.
As trendy as fasting has become, it seems
that it may not be beneficial for everyone –
and women in particular need to be careful.
As Dr Jason Fung, a nephrologist and world-
leading expert on IF and low-carb lifestyles,
explains, fasting is not a new idea. Men and
women have been fasting for religious reasons
for thousands of years; usually only pregnant
women, the sick and children abstain from this
practice. He adds that in his own clinic, where
close to 1 000 patients have been treated using
fasting protocols, he hasn’t noticed any significant
difference in outcomes between men and women.
If anything, he says, ‘Women tend to do better –
men, it seems, are sometimes just big babies.’
Despite its potential benefits for
autoimmunity and chronic disease, Dr Amy
Myers, a globally renowned leader in functional
medicine, warns that IF isn’t for everyone. In her
Intermittent fasting
has become a very
popular method for
losing weight and
improving health. But
if you’re a woman,
proceed with caution:
it could also trigger a
hormonal imbalance.
WHEN YOU
START...