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A weight loss doctor, who specializes in helping high performers, shares her favorite hack to eat healthy without tracking every bite

On a recent trip to France, Dr. Meghan Garcia-Webb was struck by an age-old paradox.

Everywhere she looked, she saw people enjoying cheese, wine, and bread — yet the average person seemed much healthier than the typical American.

In France, despite their reputation for rich cuisine, the obesity rate is a fraction of what we see in the United States, for all our calorie-counting and protein maxxing.

“There isn’t this pervasive diet culture of going to a restaurant and seeing how many calories are in this and how many carbs,” Garcia-Webb told Business Insider. “I do find it is refreshing in the sense that there’s not this fear around food, and the food is very satisfying.”

It’s just one example of how stressing less about your diet can lead to better weight loss and long-term health, she said.

In her concierge medicine practice, Garcia-Webb specializes in helping high achievers, such as CEOs and attorneys, manage their weight. A lot of her job is pushing back on extreme diet fads, including the trend of tracking everything.

“I really enjoy food and the more I do this work, the more compelled I feel to show people that it actually is possible to be healthy and really like to eat,” she said.

Garcia-Webb said her favorite food hack makes it easy to eat well without turning your food journal into a full-time job. Here’s how to try it at home for more nutritious meals.

A stress-free guide to healthy eating

Everyone loves a food hack, and Garcia-Webb said hers is simple: when you prepare a meal, start by making half the plate fruits and non-starchy vegetables.


A colorful salad with greens, nuts, peppers, and grilled chicken.

Filling half your plate with produce is a simple way to eat well without measuring each bite, calorie, or gram of protein.

Magda Tymczyj/Getty Images



“It’s actually very easy,” she said. “You don’t even have to cook them if you don’t want to.”

Think carrots, cucumbers, peppers, greens, tomatoes, berries, grapes, citrus — anything you’d find in the produce aisle (except potatoes). To make it even easier, opt for pre-cut options that are ready to eat or frozen produce, which is as healthy as fresh.

From there, Garcia-Webb builds a full meal by adding a source of protein, like lean meats or fish, to fill another quarter of the plate. The last quarter of the plate is for starchy foods like whole grains, pasta, rice, or potatoes.

The strategy makes it simple to get five servings a day of fruits and veggies. Each serving is about a handful when you’re eyeballing it.

As you fill up on produce, the high-volume, high-fiber food keeps you full and satisfied after eating, so you’re less likely to reach for junk food later. That means you’ll find yourself eating healthier without having to count a single calorie or even measure a portion.

When to track your food for weight loss

There’s nothing inherently wrong with tracking your eating habits, and calculating every gram of protein is fine if that works for you.

Still, for most people, too much tracking can be a burden, taking away the enjoyment of food and making you less likely to stick to your healthy habits long-term.

Instead of trying to track everything you eat forever, Garcia-Webb recommends keeping a food log for a few days: it can give you a baseline sense of your current habits and what you can change to move toward your goals.

“You build this intuitive knowledge, and then you have a rough sense of what it looks like for you,” she said.

A temporary habit of food tracking can be helpful if you feel like you’re doing everything right and wonder why you aren’t losing weight.


A woman in a grocery store comparing two cartons of dairy

Food labels can mislead you by making a processed snack seem healthy because of added protein, but sneaking in extra sugars.

Luke Chan/Getty Images



Garcia-Webb said if you’ve never tracked your habits, it’s common to eat more and exercise less than you realize.

These days, plenty of convenience foods disguise ultra-processed junk with a “health halo” of added protein or other nutrients to make you believe you’re making a nutritious choice.

“People think that they’re eating healthier than they are,” Garcia-Webb said. “Something that we can all fall prey to is very good marketing.”




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Hims & Hers removes a knock-off weight loss drug days after introducing it

Hims & Hers unveiled a once-a-day weight-loss pill this week, calling it an alternative for needle-averse customers and those looking for smaller doses.

It was essentially a cheaper copy of the Wegovy pill that the pharmaceutical company, Novo Nordisk, released earlier this year.

About 48 hours later, the telehealth company said it would stop selling it.

“Since launching the compounded semaglutide pill on our platform, we’ve had constructive conversations with stakeholders across the industry,” Hims & Hers said in a statement shared with Business Insider on Sunday. “As a result, we have decided to stop offering access to this treatment.

When Hims & Hers first made the compounded semaglutide pill available to customers on Thursday, the company said it met “rigorous clinical standards.”

“We adhere to all federal and state standards for compounding, and all active pharmaceutical ingredients (APIs) in compounded treatments are sourced exclusively from FDA-registered facilities,” the company said.

Compounding a new version of existing drugs typically occurs when those drugs are facing a shortage, which has periodically been the case in recent years for some of the most popular weight-loss and diabetes drugs on the market.

However, the Food and Drug Administration called out Hims & Hers in a statement issued the following day.

The agency said it intends to restrict certain ingredients used in non-FDA-approved compounded drugs that are “mass-marketed by companies — including Hims & Hers and other compounding pharmacies — as similar alternatives to FDA-approved drugs.”

“Entities engaged in the manufacture, distribution, or marketing of unapproved compounded GLP-1 products should be aware that failure to adequately address any violations may result in legal action without further notice, including, without limitation, seizure and injunction,” the agency said.

Although weight-loss medications aren’t new, Novo Nordisk breathed new life into the industry with its product, Ozempic, around 2022. The company marketed Ozempic as an injectable type 2 diabetes medication, but doctors began prescribing it to patients to address obesity. As a result of rising demands, Novo Nordisk developed Wegovy, a drug specifically geared toward managing weight.

Both those drugs were administered only by injection until Wegovy launched its oral version in January.

Many health-focused companies have developed off-brand versions of the medications to cash in on soaring demand.




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Matt Damon says cutting one thing out of his diet got him down to his ‘high school’ weight

Matt Damon, 55, says one diet change left him lighter than he has been in years.

During an appearance on Wednesday’s episode of the “New Heights” podcast, Damon spoke about how he prepared for his latest role in “The Odyssey.”

“I was in really good shape. I lost a lot of weight. He said he wanted me like lean but strong. It’s a weird thing,” Damon told hosts Jason and Travis Kelce, referring to the film’s director, Christopher Nolan.

To achieve that physique, Damon said he cut one thing out of his diet.

“I literally, just because of this other thing I did with my doctor, stopped eating gluten,” Damon said. “I used to walk around between 185 and 200. I did that whole movie at 167. And I haven’t been that light since high school. So it was a lot of training and a really strict diet.”

The actor said he works with a trainer, and compared the physical preparation to how the Kelce siblings would gear up for a football season, with training becoming part of his daily routine.

“You know, it’s like just part of your day. It’s part of your job, right? And it’s like yeah, you get really routinized about it and really kind of build your day around all that stuff,” Damon said.

The actor added that he hasn’t had gluten since. “I’m done. I’m done. I’m gluten-free everything,” Damon said.

A gluten-free diet eliminates gluten, a protein found in grains such as wheat, barley, and rye. It is often adopted for medical or digestive reasons, including to manage symptoms of celiac disease.

For most people, gluten isn’t necessarily harmful.

“Evidence suggests that, for general health, the emphasis should be on a whole, minimally processed, plant-based diet, which can include gluten-containing grains,” Grace Fjeldberg, a registered dietician with the Mayo Clinic Health System, told Business Insider in 2021.

Despite its popularity, a gluten-free diet doesn’t necessarily result in weight loss and isn’t a universal approach to better health.

Damon is no stranger to getting into peak shape for a role.

In a 2016 BBC interview, Damon said that getting back into shape for his return to the Bourne franchise was “brutal,” after his last appearance in 2007’s “The Bourne Ultimatum.”

“For the first Bourne movie I was 29 and I thought that was hard work getting into shape,” Damon said.

“Now I’m 45 and it’s just brutal. We shot this bare-knuckle fighting scene on my 45th birthday and it was a lot of work to get there,” he added.




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