I've become a bit of a nutrition and fitness nerd over the years. All out of a desire to be healthy so I can live as long as possible, not out of a desire to loss weight. I doubt that will ever be an issue for me. But when looking up health stuff you inevitably come across weight loss stuff. I'm a curious person and how difficult it is for many people to loss weight is a somewhat compelling subjecting, on top of that my wife always wants to loss weight, so I've done some research.
My thoughts on the military diet plan. First the name made me want to find some history for this diet. Why "military" diet, and if it is based off of this American heart diet, why go from heart diet to military diet? The two names don't seem to have anything in common. On top of that I would be more inclined to want to do a diet that implies it is good for my heart, than one that sounds like it was fed to soldiers. You'd think soldiers in America are fed properly, I mean they have to be healthy right? All the stories I heard from my father and his best friend seemed to say otherwise, that military food sucked, not only in taste but in nutritional quality. And here is an article from 2010, many years after my father's time showing that they just started improving nutritional quality.
http://missoulian.com/lifestyles/health-med-fit/army-alters-meals-at-basic-training-to-improve-recruits-health/article_ef1fb0ac-01bf-11e0-86df-001cc4c03286.htmlYou'd think keep the bodies of the people who are supposedly fighting for our "freedom" healthy would be pretty basic. The lack of common sense is mind boggling. But then soldiers are just pawns....
Would I want a military diet...probably not, a heart diet, maybe. Lets look closer. According to this article:
http://www.livestrong.com/article/480028-the-three-day-aha-diet/The diet was said to have been created by the American heart association, but they deny any connection to this diet, and state that it wouldn't be a very healthy diet. That page above has some good advice on this kind of thing.
Further, it is very similar to the 3-day chemical diet. Again, why chemical diet? To suggest your putting specific combinations of chemicals in your body so you have to get it just right? Well, really, your kind of doing that any time you eat. All of our food is composed of chemicals, and different combinations have different results. Calling it a chemical diet seems silly in this sense; not every body is the same, so always having the same chemicals for every body is going to produce different results for different bodies.
That said, my own thoughts. I'm surprised they have you limiting caffeine if they want to help you loss weight. My thought would be to increase caffeine, as it speeds up your metabolism. I mean to much is bad for you, but I would think they might recommend a bit more caffeine at least to get you started.
Next thought, the diet is prescribing a set amount of food for everyone regardless of their caloric needs. Calories are something we need to survive, so you need to find out your Body mass index, ideal weight range etc, and calculate how much calories you personally need. I get they want to make it cookie cutter so you have less to think about, which may equal less time getting discouraged over how to do it right, but really you got to do it right. You're body is a chemistry laboratory, you've got to put the right stuff in to get the right result, and not every body is going to get the same result from this diet.
It doesn't list substitutions, without a range of suitable choices many people are going to loose out on key nutrients. A lot of people will get bored with such a rigid diet. Perhaps a warrior wouldn't, but why be so 'militantly' rigid with your diet? Unless your specifically treating a certain health condition, in which case you kind of need a medical professionals advice on exactly what to eat. This diet has medical professionals giving it a clear no.
It doesn't gradually wean you onto another more sustainable diet. Assuming you finish this diet to begin with, your going to need a more healthy diet for the long run, assuming you gained weight due to unhealthy diet, this diet teaches you little about eating a balanced diet.
Now hunger and weight loss are dependent upon how much you eat and how much energy you burn. But also the brain controls your appetite, and your general weight range/ set point. Its a range of about 10-20 pounds. This is the hypothalimus, it is a part of it called the arcuate nucleus. It acts as a kind of theremostate. When your thermestate recognizes that the temperature has dropped, it responds by raising the temperature. The hypothalimus does the same with your weight, it is a survival mechanism. A mechanism, it doesn't intelligently decide anything. If your body weight has been something for a sufficiently long period of time, it is programmed to keep you that way. If you loose to much it goes, shit our balance is off, maybe we are in danger. If food is spars making you not hungry even though you are ridiculously thin, will help you survive with some degree of comfort. Imagine being ridiculously hungry all the time, and not being able to satiate that hunger. Also when you do get food, you don't want to pig out on it, if your resources are highly limited. On the other hand if resources are abundant as they are in modern developed countries like the US, then your set range is higher. If you loose weight really fast your brain is conditioned to make your really hungry to get you back to what was the norm. On top of that when you do eat your brain is going to set just the right bodily conditions for you to store extra calories to make up for the sudden loss. So this military diet, if you do loose weight fast with it, and you don't have a good transitional plan, your brain is going to fight it. And once it is done, your body is going to pack on the calories.
On top of this, your set range seems to be fixed in place for at least about 7 years. Meaning, if you had weighed 200 pounds, and you get down to 130, your doing to have to stick to a good healthy diet and exercise plan that will keep you close to this weight for at least 7 years. At least this is what the research seems to show right now. So this implies to me that weight loss plans need to come with a good long term strategy drawn up. This also seems to say that those that loose weight easily, and keep it off without sticking to a good diet, probably forced their weight up but their set range was still low (remember it takes 7 years to change), so in turn they lost weight easily, because all this time their brain has been trying to make them loose weight anyway. A metaphor might be to say that you are heavy or skinny on the outside, but something different on the inside.
On top of this I distrust any weight loss diet that doesn't also come with exercise plans. Also in some cases tools to help the person change how they think, feel, and view their diet has been shown to be very helpful.
So in conclusion, I give it one quarter star, for trying to make weight loss easy, and most of the foods it suggests eating are healthy foods. Other than that, it actually seems like it might do more harm than good. Perhaps if the person on it has enough sense they might be able to make something good of it, but that seems a big if.
Here is a good food guide:
And another similar one: