Posts Tagged ‘calories’



New Feature: The Food & Exercise Diary

Thursday, April 22nd, 2010

We’ve wanted to add a Food Diary to Shrinking ever since we started conceptualizing what our web app would do. It’s also been one of the most requested features from our users. So today we’re excited to announce that our new Food and Exercise Diary feature is now available. We have a great solution in place now and it is sure to help our users take their weight-loss efforts to new heights.

Serious weight-loss requires keeping a keen eye on what you eat and how many calories you burn throughout the day. Our new Diary feature is the perfect solution for doing that. It allows you to keep track of everything you eat and all of your activity.

Here are some screenshots of the key features in the diary. You can click on the images to see larger versions.

Food Entry

The new Food and Exercise Diary will allow you to keep track of the food you consume and automatically calculates how many calories and how much fat you are consuming.

Nutritional Details

Clicking on an individual food item gives you the complete nutritional details.

Exercise Diary

The Exercise tab in the Diary allows you to enter your daily activities and will calculated an estimated number of calories burned, based on your weight.

Calendar

The Calendar tab will show you the overall picture. It tells you the calories consumed and burned and gives you the all important Net calorie calculation, which is critical in a serious weight-loss plan.

The Food and Exercise Diary is a Premium plan feature and will be available to all Premium account holders immediately. If you are not a Premium account holder then you can easily upgrade by clicking on the Food Diary tab and following the instructions for upgrading. The Shrinking Premium plan is $3/month and gives you access to the Food & Exercise Diary, Notes, and the BMI Analyzer.

The Food and Exercise Diary is powered by the application that the cool kids over at FatSecret have created. They have one of the best API’s that we’ve ever worked with. Well done FatSecret team.

The Shrinking Team
Weight-Loss is Hard, We’re Here to Make it Easier

The Mathematics Behind Weight-Loss

Saturday, February 20th, 2010

All weight-loss simply boils down to burning more calories than you consume. This is the principle behind diet & exercise, bariatric surgery, and any other weight-loss methods. If you burn more calories than you consume your body will have to start burning fat stores for the energy it needs.

Exercise is important because it increases the number of calories that you burn daily, while eating less and maintaining a healthy diet helps to limit your calorie intake. Understanding these basic facts let’s us start looking at weight-loss from a more methodical and mathematical standpoint. A pound is 3500 calories. So for each pound you want to lose you will need to burn 3500 calories more than you intake.

Here are a couple of examples to show you how to think about your weight-loss program mathematically.

Example #1
First, let’s say that Joe weighs about 350 pounds and wants to get down to 250. He has a Basal Metabolic Rate of 2920 calories per day. If he maintains a diet of 1800 calories per day then he will have a net loss of 1120 calories per day. And since there are 3500 calories in a pound, he can expect to lose about .32 pounds per day. So it would take him about 313 days to reach his weight-loss goals if he just maintains his diet of 1800 calories per day.

Example #2
If Joe is more aggressive and adds a daily workout to his weight-loss plan then he can accelerate the weight-loss. If he does a moderately intense workout and burns 750 calories each day, in addition to the 1800 calories diet, he can have a net loss of 1870 calories per day. With a calorie deficit of 2670 calories (.53 pounds) he can expect to reach his weight-loss goal in about 189 days.

Here is a simple formula to help you calculate your weight-loss and show you what you can realistically expect.

The Weight Loss Formula

Ever wonder how contestants on The Biggest Loser lose so much weight? It’s simply because of the same formula. Contestants on the show spend about 6 hours per day in the gym, so they can burn 6000-7000 calories per day. Let’s look at an example.

Example #3
Jane is a contestant on the show and weighs 310 pounds. She has a BMR of 2140 and maintains a diet of 1800 calories. If she burns 6000 calories per day, then she can achieve a deficit of 6340 calories, which is about 1.81 pounds. So in a week she would be able to lose around 12.5 pounds.

It’s also important to note that your BMR will change as you lose weight. As you get smaller you will need less calories to maintain your weight, so the BMR will drop correspondingly.

All methods of weight-loss target one portion of the weight-loss equation. Diets and bariatric surgery focus on the calories consumed part, exercise increase the number of calories burned, and so on. Understanding what it actually takes to lose weight is an important part of the process and can show you the commitment that you need to make to be able to achieve your goals.

The Shrinking Team
Weight-Loss is Hard, We’re Here to Make it Easier