Amanda Sainsbury-Salis
Amanda Sainsbury-Salis, PhD is an Australian medical researcher, educator and author. Her research interests are hypothalamic control of body weight, famine reaction, metabolism, body composition, anorexia, obesity, eating disorders.[1]
Biography
Sainsbury-Salis was born in Sydney, Australia in 1969 and grew up in Perth, Australia. She graduated from the University of Western Australia in 1990. Then she was the Australian recipient of the Boursière de la Confédération (Swiss Government Scholarship) in 1991 and she received her PhD from the University of Geneva, Switzerland in 1996. She returned to Australia in 1998 to work at the Garvan Institute of Medical Research where she currently leads a research team. She is also a senior lecturer in the University of New South Wales Faculty of Medicine.[2]
As a young adult she had a binge eating disorder which caused her weight to rise to 93 kilos (height 160 cm) despite numerous attempts to lose weight. After she started medical research in weight loss, she lost 28 kilos and has kept it off over 10 years.[3]
Her book The Don't Go Hungry Diet was published by Bantam Australia in 1997. She shares her scientific and personal insights about weight regulation with the public through community workshops, her website[4] and media such as her regular column on weight loss in the Australian Women's Health magazine.[5]
Famine Reaction and Fat Brake
Sainsbury-Salis introduced the terms "famine reaction" and "fat brake" into the diet literature. She describes those two defence mechanism of body as follows:
The Famine Reaction is your body's way of protecting you from losing too much weight. The Famine Reaction is activated whenever your weight drops below a certain threshold. It triggers the nagging hunger and cravings for fattening foods that you've no doubt experienced while trying to lose weight in the past. The Famine Reaction also causes dramatic reductions in your metabolic rate and contributes to plateaus and rapid rebound weight gain. Your body not only has a Famine Reaction that protects you from losing weight, it also has an ingenious mechanism – the Fat Brake – that helps protect you from gaining weight. Whenever you eat more than you need, your Fat Brake blunts your appetite (notably your appetite for fattening foods) and boosts your metabolic rate.[6]
The Don't Go Hungry Diet
"The Don't Go Hungry Diet" is a lifestyle diet. According to her, conventional diets (calorie restricted diets) don't always work because the body goes into "famine reaction". The body wants to stay at a "set-point" weight and, to establish that, slows the metabolism and hangs on to fat. The way around this is to eat only whenever one feels physically hungry, even if one only eats something like a piece of chocolate cake. While this seems good for many dieters, it can also be a "license to overindulge" for some.[7] Along with ad libitum eating (eating just enough to satisfy hunger), she also advocates eating a great variety of fruits and vegetables and whole (minimally processed) foods.[8]
Awards
- 2002 Young Investigator of the Year Award from the Australasian Society for the Study of Obesity
- 2004 NSW Young Tall Poppy Award from the Australian Institute of Policy & Science.
Books
- Sainsbury-Salis, Amanda. The Don't Go Hungry Diet, Bantam Australia, 2007. ISBN 978-1-86325-523-3 / 1863255230
References
- ↑ Garvan Institute of Medical Research, Dr Amanda-Sainsbury-Salis
- ↑ Faculty of Medicine
- ↑ The Don't Go Hungry Diet, Sainsbury-Salis, Amanda, Bantam Australia, 2007. ISBN 978-1-86325-523-3 / 1863255230
- ↑ Sainsbury-Salis website
- ↑ Australian Women's Health magazine
- ↑ Dr Amanda Online Dr Amanda Online FAQs
- ↑ Australian Women's Health magazine December 2007 issue, Page:150
- ↑ GI News, 1 February 2007
External links
- Dr Amanda Online
- Dr Amanda Sainsbury-Salis profile in Garvan Institute of Medical Research
- Norman Swan interviews with Dr. Amanda on famine reaction on ABC National's Health Report
- Interview with Dr. Amanda on Mornings with Margaret Throsby at ABC Classic FM