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Wellness Wire
Thursday, July 8, 2010

Gwyneth Paltrow’s osteopenia: Nation attacks her diet, ignores her flimsy weight training

Ever since Gwyneth Paltrow revealed in her GOOP newsletter that she has osteopenia, the precursor to osteoporosis, everyone from Whoopi Goldberg to Fox News has weighed in. A scapegoat is fast emerging: Her “crazy” macrobiotic diet that prohibits dairy. Oh, right cause you can only get calcium from dairy products. What about dark green leafy vegetables, sesame tahini, sea vegetables, and salmon (with the bones) that are all rich calcium sources?

I posit a different culprit. The inane workouts of Tracy Anderson.

Check out this clip, which Oprah aired, where she says that no woman should ever lift more than three pounds. It makes me really sad that this goofy video probably scared millions of women from lifting heavier weights.

Not only is it really inefficient advice—Anderson has clients do hundreds of reps—it’s also downright dangerous. Lifting weights prevents bone loss, and may even help build new bone. And using real weights produces real results. “Women burned nearly twice as many calories in the two hours after their workout when they lifted 85 percent of their max load for eight reps than when they did more reps (15) at a lower weight (45 percent of their max),” according to a study published in Medicine & Science in Sports & Exercise. And guess what? They didn’t bulk up.

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