Celebrities

Gwyneth Paltrow, in a recent image. GTRES

The actress, who has already generated other controversies, has spoken in an interview about how much you can lose weight without danger of death

Goop, the strange lifestyle that has led Gwyneth Paltrow to sign for Netflix

The Goop lifestyle portal founded by Gwyneth Paltrow is no stranger to the controversies: in the past the recommendations he has made through that platform or the healing properties he has attributed to some of the products he sells or promotes, without No type of medical evidence to support these claims has earned him endless criticism .

His latest attempt to introduce a new term in popular vocabulary has once again placed the actress - inventor of the expression "conscious separation" that she used to announce her divorce from Chris Martin - in the spotlight.

In an interview with the psychologist and writer Traci Mann entitled "Dismantling the myths of diets," the article in question promises to reveal to readers the best way to achieve " the minimum weight needed to live," that is, how much they can lose weight without danger of death

Traci Mann speaks of a genetically "established range" in terms of weight that extreme diets do not respect, hence the kilos that are lost that way usually end up returning, always according to his theory.

"If your weight falls below that threshold, a series of biological changes begin to occur due to lack of calories, and as a general rule that pushes you to return to your previous weight. However, if you do not fall below that threshold, but you approach the limit, you should be able to keep yourself without your body starting to cause the aforementioned negative changes, "he says.

To be fair, the text that introduces the conversation also recommends forgetting the scale and temporary regimes in favor of a permanent change in the lifestyle of each individual, but that has not prevented several experts such as the doctor Giles Yeo - from the University of Cambridge - they attack Goop and Mann for using a 'confusing' terminology that would promote the idea that bordering on starvation is not dangerous.

In response, she has clarified in statements to the Daily Mail that the concept of 'minimum weight necessary to live' refers to what can be achieved without falling into unhealthy behavior or radically restricting food.

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