NICE Guideline NG246 on Overweight and Obesity Management was updated 8 January 2026. Key change: waist-to-height ratios should only be used to classify central adiposity in children aged 5+ years. This consolidates multiple previous NICE guidelines into one comprehensive resource for primary care obesity management.
Exercise & Nutrition for GPs
Evidence-based clinical education for UK primary care — because your patients have already Googled everything, and half of it was wrong
Last Updated: 22 March 2026
Nutrition
Evidence-based dietary advice, myth-busting, and practical consultation scripts
Exercise
Four pillars of exercise medicine, sarcopenia prevention, and injury avoidance
For GP Trainees
MRCGP-focused content with exam pearls and consultation scripts
Evidence-Based
All guidance verified against NICE CKS, BNF, and current UK guidelines
Executive Summary: What You'll Master Today
Because you have 47 other things to do before lunch, and that's just the morning list
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Quick Facts at a Glance:
📥 Downloads & Resources
Useful downloads and web links for Exercise & Nutrition
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🌐 Web Resources
- NICE CKS: Obesity Management
Primary care guidance on obesity assessment and management
- NICE NG246: Overweight and Obesity Management
Comprehensive guideline updated January 2026
- NHS: Physical Activity Guidelines
UK Chief Medical Officers' physical activity recommendations
- British Dietetic Association
Evidence-based nutrition resources and guidance
- British National Formulary
Drug information for prescribing in obesity and related conditions
- British Geriatrics Society: Sarcopenia
Clinical guidance on sarcopenia detection and management
- Sport England: Active Lives Survey
UK physical activity statistics and trends
- RCGP: Lifestyle Medicine
Royal College of General Practitioners resources
📚 Quick Navigation
🧠 Brainy Bites: Essential Exercise & Nutrition Wisdom
The stuff seasoned GPs wish someone had told them sooner
- 💡Diet drives weight loss, exercise drives health — Patients often overestimate exercise's contribution to weight loss. The truth: a 30-minute run burns ~300 calories (one chocolate bar). But that same run improves insulin sensitivity, cardiovascular fitness, and mental health. Tell patients: "Use food to change the number on the scales. Use exercise to change everything else."
- 🎯Protein is the secret weapon for weight loss — Higher protein intake (1.2-1.6g/kg) increases satiety, preserves muscle during calorie restriction, and has the highest thermic effect of all macronutrients. Script: "Aim for a palm-sized portion of protein at each meal — it'll keep you fuller for longer and protect your muscle mass."
- ⚠️Ultra-processed foods are engineered for overconsumption — It's not just about calories. UPFs are designed to bypass satiety signals through texture engineering, flavour layering, and rapid digestibility. UK adults get 57% of daily energy from UPFs. Script: "Try to eat more foods that look like they came from a plant or animal, and fewer foods that were made in a plant."
- 🔑Sarcopenia starts earlier than you think — Muscle loss begins at age 30 (250g/year), accelerating to 15% per decade after 70. This isn't just about frailty — it's about insulin resistance, falls, independence, and mortality. Resistance training 2x/week + adequate protein (1.0-1.2g/kg) can reverse it. Script: "Strength training isn't just for bodybuilders — it's medicine for ageing."
- 💡FODMAPs are for IBS, not general health — Low FODMAP is a diagnostic elimination diet for IBS, not a long-term eating pattern. Patients often self-restrict unnecessarily after Googling. Script: "Low FODMAP is a short-term tool to identify triggers, not a permanent diet. Long-term restriction can harm your gut microbiome."
- 🏥Eggs are not the enemy — Decades of fear-mongering have made patients terrified of eggs. Current evidence: dietary cholesterol has minimal impact on blood cholesterol for most people. Saturated fat and trans fats are the real culprits. Script: "For most people, eggs are fine. It's the bacon, sausage, and buttered toast that are the problem."
- 📋Progressive overload is non-negotiable for strength gains — Doing the same easy workout forever won't build strength. Muscles adapt to stress, so you must gradually increase load, reps, or difficulty. Script: "If it feels easy, it's maintenance. If you want to get stronger, you need to challenge yourself a bit more each week."
- 🩺Older adults need strength training more than cardio — Walking is great, but it won't prevent sarcopenia or falls. Older patients need resistance training (bodyweight, bands, or weights) plus balance exercises. Script: "Walking keeps your heart healthy, but strength training keeps you independent. Both matter, but if you had to choose one, choose strength."
1️⃣ Nutrition Foundations
What actually matters in nutrition science
What Matters Most in Nutrition?
Total Energy Intake: Calories still matter. Energy balance (calories in vs calories out) is the primary driver of weight change. No diet can bypass thermodynamics.
Protein for Satiety & Muscle: Protein increases fullness, has the highest thermic effect, and preserves muscle mass during weight loss. Aim for 1.2-1.6g/kg for weight loss, 1.0-1.2g/kg for older adults.
Fibre for Health: Fibre promotes satiety, supports gut health, and improves cardiometabolic markers. Target 30g/day from whole foods, not supplements.
Food Quality Matters: Nutrient density, satiety, and food matrix effects influence health beyond just calories. Ultra-processed foods are engineered for overconsumption.
Adherence Beats Perfection: The best diet is the one the patient can actually sustain. Consistency over months and years matters more than short-term perfection.
🧠 Mnemonic: PACE
- PProtein — Prioritise protein for satiety and muscle preservation
- AAdherence — Sustainability matters more than diet branding
- CCalorie control — Energy balance drives weight change
- EEveryday eating pattern — Focus on repeatable habits, not perfection
GP Pearl: "The best diet is not the most fashionable one. It is the healthiest one the patient can actually sustain."
2️⃣ Calories vs Macros
Which matters more for weight loss?
Calories or Macros — Which Matters More?
Calories Largely Determine Weight Change: Energy balance is the primary driver. A calorie deficit leads to weight loss regardless of macronutrient composition. This is thermodynamics, not opinion.
Macros Influence Satiety & Adherence: While calories drive weight change, macronutrient composition affects hunger, food quality, muscle retention, and how easy it is to stick to the diet.
Patients Don't Always Need Macro Tracking: Formal macro counting is time-consuming and can promote obsessive behaviours. For most patients, focusing on protein, fibre, and portion control is sufficient.
The Smarter GP Message: Focus on protein (palm-sized portion per meal), fibre (vegetables, whole grains, legumes), portion control (smaller plates, mindful eating), and repeatable eating patterns (meal prep, consistent meal times).
Myth vs Fact:
Myth: "Calories are all that matter."
Fact: Calories drive weight change, but macros affect hunger, food quality, muscle retention, and sustainability.
Consultation Phrase: "Calories drive the direction of weight change, but food composition affects how easy it is to stay on track."
3️⃣ Diet Comparisons
Major diets compared — what works, what doesn't, and what to tell patients
Major Diets Compared
Evidence-based comparison of popular dietary approaches for primary care
Mediterranean Diet
Traditional eating pattern from Mediterranean regions emphasising whole foods, healthy fats, and plant-based meals.
- Core principle: High in vegetables, fruits, whole grains, legumes, nuts, olive oil, fish
- Moderate: Poultry, eggs, dairy
- Low: Red meat, processed foods, added sugars
- Cardiovascular health: Reduces CVD risk, improves lipid profile
- Diabetes prevention: Improves insulin sensitivity
- Cognitive health: May reduce dementia risk
- Sustainability: Easy to maintain long-term
- Evidence base: Strong RCT evidence (PREDIMED trial)
Emphasise:
- Olive oil as primary fat source
- Vegetables and fruits (5+ portions/day)
- Whole grains (brown rice, wholemeal bread, oats)
- Legumes (beans, lentils, chickpeas)
- Nuts and seeds
- Fish and seafood (2+ times/week)
- Moderate wine with meals (optional)
- Not specifically for weight loss: Can be calorie-dense (olive oil, nuts)
- Cost: Fresh fish, olive oil, nuts can be expensive
- Cultural fit: May not align with all UK dietary preferences
- Portion control still needed: Healthy foods can still lead to weight gain if overeaten
Best for: Cardiovascular health, diabetes prevention, long-term sustainability
Script: "This is one of the best-studied diets for heart health. It's not a quick-fix weight loss diet, but it's a sustainable way of eating that reduces your risk of heart disease and diabetes."
Caution: "Watch portion sizes, especially with olive oil and nuts — they're healthy but calorie-dense."
Low-Carbohydrate Diet
Reduces carbohydrate intake to 50-150g/day, increasing protein and fat.
- Carbs: 20-40% of total energy
- Protein: 25-35% of total energy
- Fat: 30-50% of total energy
- Weight loss: Effective for short-term weight loss (6-12 months)
- Appetite suppression: Higher protein and fat increase satiety
- Glycaemic control: Improves HbA1c in type 2 diabetes
- Triglycerides: Often reduces triglycerides
Emphasise:
- Lean meats, poultry, fish
- Eggs
- Non-starchy vegetables (leafy greens, broccoli, peppers)
- Healthy fats (olive oil, avocado, nuts)
- Full-fat dairy (in moderation)
Limit:
- Bread, pasta, rice, potatoes
- Sugary foods and drinks
- Most fruits (except berries in moderation)
- Adherence: Difficult to sustain long-term for many patients
- Social challenges: Restrictive in social settings
- Nutrient deficiencies: Risk of low fibre, B vitamins, magnesium
- LDL cholesterol: May increase LDL in some individuals
- Not superior long-term: Weight loss similar to other diets after 12 months
Best for: Short-term weight loss, type 2 diabetes management (with monitoring)
Script: "Low-carb diets can be effective for weight loss and blood sugar control, especially in the first 6-12 months. But they're not magic — they work because they help you eat fewer calories overall."
Caution: "Make sure you're still eating plenty of vegetables and not just bacon and cheese. And if you're on diabetes medication, we'll need to monitor your blood sugars closely."
Ketogenic Diet
Very low carbohydrate diet (<50g/day, often <20g/day) that induces ketosis.
- Carbs: 5-10% of total energy
- Protein: 20-25% of total energy
- Fat: 70-75% of total energy
- Mechanism: Forces body to use fat for fuel, producing ketones
- Rapid initial weight loss: Significant water weight loss in first 1-2 weeks
- Appetite suppression: Ketones may reduce hunger
- Epilepsy: Established treatment for drug-resistant epilepsy
- Type 2 diabetes: Can improve glycaemic control (requires medication adjustment)
Emphasise:
- Fatty meats, fish, eggs
- High-fat dairy (butter, cream, cheese)
- Oils and fats (olive oil, coconut oil, avocado)
- Low-carb vegetables (leafy greens, cauliflower, courgette)
- Nuts and seeds (in moderation)
Avoid:
- All grains, bread, pasta, rice
- Most fruits
- Legumes
- Starchy vegetables
- Sugar in any form
- Very restrictive: Extremely difficult to maintain long-term
- Keto flu: Headache, fatigue, nausea in first 1-2 weeks
- Nutrient deficiencies: Low fibre, vitamins, minerals
- LDL cholesterol: May significantly increase LDL in some individuals
- Social isolation: Very difficult in social settings
- Not superior long-term: Weight loss similar to other diets after 12 months
- Medication interactions: Requires close monitoring with diabetes/BP meds
Best for: Drug-resistant epilepsy (medical supervision), short-term weight loss (with caution)
Script: "Keto can lead to rapid initial weight loss, but most of that is water weight. Long-term, it's no better than other diets, and it's much harder to stick to. Unless you have epilepsy, there's usually no medical reason to go this extreme."
Caution: "If you're on diabetes or blood pressure medication, we need to monitor you closely. And make sure you're getting enough fibre and micronutrients — this diet is very restrictive."
High-Protein Diet
Increases protein intake to 25-35% of total energy (1.2-1.6g/kg body weight).
- Protein: 25-35% of total energy
- Carbs: 40-50% of total energy
- Fat: 20-30% of total energy
- Satiety: Protein is the most satiating macronutrient
- Muscle preservation: Protects lean mass during weight loss
- Thermic effect: Protein has highest thermic effect (20-30% of calories burned in digestion)
- Weight loss: Effective for weight loss when combined with calorie deficit
- Metabolic health: Improves body composition
Emphasise:
- Lean meats (chicken, turkey, lean beef)
- Fish and seafood
- Eggs
- Low-fat dairy (Greek yoghurt, cottage cheese)
- Legumes (beans, lentils, chickpeas)
- Tofu and tempeh
- Protein powder (whey, casein, plant-based)
Target: Palm-sized portion of protein at each meal
- Cost: Protein-rich foods can be expensive
- Kidney concerns: Not harmful for healthy kidneys, but caution in CKD
- Displacement: May displace other important foods if taken to extreme
- Not magic: Still requires calorie deficit for weight loss
Best for: Weight loss, muscle preservation, satiety
Script: "Increasing your protein intake is one of the most effective strategies for weight loss. It keeps you fuller for longer, protects your muscle mass, and even burns more calories during digestion."
Target: "Aim for a palm-sized portion of protein at each meal — that's about 25-30g of protein."
Caution: "If you have kidney disease, we need to be more careful with protein intake. But for most people, higher protein is safe and beneficial."
Low-Fat Diet
Reduces fat intake to 20-30% of total energy.
- Fat: 20-30% of total energy
- Carbs: 50-60% of total energy
- Protein: 15-20% of total energy
- Calorie reduction: Fat is calorie-dense (9 kcal/g), so reducing fat reduces calories
- Heart health: May reduce LDL cholesterol if saturated fat is reduced
- Simplicity: Easy to understand ("avoid fatty foods")
Emphasise:
- Lean meats and poultry (skinless)
- Fish (not fried)
- Low-fat dairy
- Whole grains
- Fruits and vegetables
- Legumes
Limit:
- Butter, oils, margarine
- Fatty meats
- Full-fat dairy
- Fried foods
- Nuts and seeds (in excess)
- Outdated paradigm: Not all fats are bad — unsaturated fats are beneficial
- Satiety: Fat increases satiety; low-fat diets may leave patients hungry
- Nutrient absorption: Fat-soluble vitamins (A, D, E, K) need fat for absorption
- Processed low-fat foods: Often high in sugar and refined carbs
- Not superior: No better for weight loss than other diets
Best for: Patients who prefer this approach (personal preference)
Script: "Low-fat diets can work for weight loss, but we now know that not all fats are bad. Healthy fats from olive oil, nuts, and fish are actually good for your heart. The key is to reduce saturated fat and trans fats, not all fat."
Caution: "Avoid processed 'low-fat' foods — they're often loaded with sugar. Focus on whole foods instead."
Intermittent Fasting
Eating pattern that cycles between periods of eating and fasting.
- 16:8: 16 hours fasting, 8-hour eating window (most popular)
- 5:2: Normal eating 5 days, 500-600 kcal on 2 days
- Alternate day fasting: Fasting every other day
- Calorie reduction: Restricting eating window often reduces total calorie intake
- Simplicity: No food tracking or macro counting required
- Metabolic benefits: May improve insulin sensitivity
- Autophagy: Cellular "clean-up" process (evidence mostly in animals)
16:8 Method (most common):
- Fast for 16 hours (including sleep)
- Eat within 8-hour window (e.g., 12pm-8pm)
- Water, black coffee, tea allowed during fasting
5:2 Method:
- Eat normally 5 days per week
- Restrict to 500-600 kcal on 2 non-consecutive days
- Hunger: Can be difficult initially; some patients never adapt
- Social challenges: Fasting periods may conflict with social meals
- Binge risk: Some patients overeat during eating windows
- Not magic: Weight loss is due to calorie restriction, not fasting per se
- Contraindications: Diabetes (medication adjustment needed), eating disorders, pregnancy
Best for: Patients who prefer structure over food tracking, those who don't like breakfast
Script: "Intermittent fasting can be an effective way to reduce calories without tracking food. But it's not magic — it works because you're eating less overall. If you're constantly hungry or bingeing during your eating window, it's not the right approach for you."
Caution: "If you're on diabetes medication, we need to adjust your doses to avoid hypoglycaemia. And if you have a history of disordered eating, this approach may not be suitable."
Commercial Diets (Slimming World, Weight Watchers)
Structured commercial weight loss programmes with group support.
- Slimming World: "Free foods" (lean protein, fruit, veg) + limited "syns" (treats)
- Weight Watchers (WW): Points-based system assigning values to foods
- Structure: Clear rules and guidelines
- Social support: Group meetings provide accountability and motivation
- Flexibility: No foods are completely banned
- Evidence: Modest weight loss (3-5% body weight) in trials
- NHS endorsement: Some programmes available on NHS referral
Slimming World:
- Unlimited "free foods" (lean meat, fish, eggs, fruit, veg, pasta, rice)
- Limited "syns" for treats (chocolate, alcohol, etc.)
- Weekly group meetings
Weight Watchers:
- Points assigned to foods based on calories, protein, sugar, saturated fat
- Daily points budget
- Weekly group meetings or app-based tracking
- Cost: Ongoing membership fees
- Time commitment: Weekly meetings may not suit everyone
- Overeating "free foods": Unlimited foods can still lead to excess calories
- Long-term adherence: Weight regain common after stopping programme
- Not superior: Similar results to other calorie-controlled diets
Best for: Patients who benefit from structure and social support
Script: "Commercial programmes like Slimming World and Weight Watchers can be effective, especially if you like the group support. They work by helping you control calories in a structured way. Some are available on NHS referral."
Caution: "Remember that 'free foods' aren't calorie-free. If you're not losing weight, you may be eating too much of them. And once you stop the programme, you'll need a plan to maintain your weight loss."
🧠 Mnemonic: STICK
- SSustainable — Can the patient maintain this long-term?
- TTolerable — Does it fit their lifestyle and preferences?
- IIntegrated into life — Can they do this at work, socially, with family?
- CConsistent — Can they follow it most days, not just occasionally?
- KKeepable — Will they still be doing this in 6 months? 12 months?
GP Pearl: "Do not teach ideology. Teach sustainability, nutritional adequacy, and adherence. The best diet is the one the patient can actually stick to."
4️⃣ Myths, Controversies & History
Fat, sugar, and the legacy of bad nutrition messaging
Is Fat Really Bad?
Not All Fats Are Equal: The blanket "fat is bad" message from the 1980s-1990s was oversimplified and harmful. We now know that fat type matters far more than total fat intake.
Unsaturated Fats Are Beneficial:
- • Monounsaturated: Olive oil, avocados, nuts — reduce LDL, increase HDL
- • Polyunsaturated: Oily fish, walnuts, flaxseed — omega-3s reduce CVD risk
Saturated Fats: Nuanced Picture: Not as harmful as once thought, but still best limited. Replace with unsaturated fats, not refined carbs. Sources: butter, cheese, fatty meat, coconut oil.
Trans Fats: The Real Villain: Artificial trans fats (partially hydrogenated oils) are unequivocally harmful. Banned in UK since 2018. Sources: some processed foods, baked goods, margarine (older formulations).
Is Sugar the Main Enemy?
Free Sugars Are Harmful: Added sugars and sugars in fruit juices/smoothies contribute to obesity, type 2 diabetes, dental caries, and CVD. UK recommendation: <5% of total energy (30g/day for adults).
Sugary Drinks Are the Worst Offenders: Liquid calories don't trigger satiety like solid food. A 500ml bottle of cola contains 54g sugar (18 teaspoons). Switching to water/diet drinks is one of the highest-yield interventions.
But It's Not Just Sugar: Ultra-processed dietary patterns are the bigger problem. These foods combine sugar, fat, salt, and additives in ways that promote overconsumption. Blaming one nutrient oversimplifies the issue.
What Went Wrong Historically?
The Low-Fat Era (1980s-2000s): Based on observational data linking saturated fat to heart disease, public health messaging demonised all fat. Food industry responded with low-fat products loaded with sugar and refined carbs. Result: obesity rates soared.
Industry Influence: Sugar industry funded research downplaying sugar's role in CVD, shifting blame to fat. Tobacco-style tactics: cherry-picking data, funding friendly researchers, attacking critics. Revealed by historical documents in 2016.
Modern Guidance Is More Nuanced: Current evidence supports: Mediterranean-style diet (healthy fats, whole foods), reducing ultra-processed foods, limiting free sugars, no single "villain" nutrient.
Myth vs Fact:
Myth: "Fat is the enemy."
Fact: Type of fat matters far more than blanket fat avoidance. Unsaturated fats are beneficial.
Myth: "Sugar is the only thing that matters."
Fact: Free sugars matter, but overall dietary pattern and ultra-processed food exposure matter too.
Consultation Script: "We used to think all fat was bad, but we now know that's not true. Healthy fats from olive oil, nuts, and fish are actually good for your heart. The real problems are trans fats (mostly banned now), too much saturated fat, and too much sugar — especially in drinks and ultra-processed foods."
5️⃣ Ultra-Processed Foods
Important, but explain it properly
Ultra-Processed Food: What It Actually Means
Definition (NOVA Classification): Industrial formulations made mostly or entirely from substances extracted from foods (oils, fats, sugar, starch, protein isolates) plus additives (flavours, colours, emulsifiers, preservatives). Typically contain 5+ ingredients, many of which you wouldn't find in a home kitchen.
Examples: Mass-produced bread, breakfast cereals, biscuits, cakes, crisps, sweets, fizzy drinks, ready meals, chicken nuggets, sausages, instant noodles, meal replacement shakes.
Not All Processing Is Bad: Freezing vegetables, canning beans, pasteurising milk, making cheese — these are processed but not ultra-processed. The issue is industrial formulation designed for profit, not nutrition.
Why These Foods Are Easy to Overconsume
Engineered for Overconsumption: UPFs are designed to bypass satiety signals through:
- • Flavour overload: Hyper-palatable combinations of sugar, fat, salt
- • Texture engineering: Soft, easy to eat quickly, minimal chewing
- • Rapid digestibility: Doesn't trigger fullness hormones effectively
- • Calorie density: High calories in small volume
- • Addictive properties: Activates reward pathways in brain
UK Statistics: 57% of daily energy intake in UK comes from ultra-processed foods. Highest consumption in adolescents (66%) and most deprived areas. Second highest globally after USA.
Health Impacts: Higher UPF intake associated with obesity, type 2 diabetes, CVD, cancer, depression, and all-cause mortality. Mechanisms: poor nutritional quality, overconsumption, displacement of whole foods, additives, packaging chemicals.
🧠 Mnemonic: FACTORY
- FFlavour overload — Hyper-palatable combinations
- AAdditives — Emulsifiers, preservatives, flavour enhancers
- CCraving — Designed to activate reward pathways
- TTexture engineering — Soft, easy to eat quickly
- OOver-eating — Bypasses satiety signals
- RRefined ingredients — Stripped of fibre and nutrients
- YYielding to convenience — Cheap, accessible, marketed heavily
Practical GP Advice
Encourage "More Real Food, Less Factory Food": Avoid purity culture or perfectionism. Small reductions matter. Swap one UPF snack for fruit/nuts. Cook one extra meal per week. Choose less processed breakfast cereal.
Consultation Script: "Try to eat more foods that look like they came from a plant or animal, and fewer foods that were made in a plant. You don't need to be perfect — even small changes add up."
Avoid Moral Judgement: UPFs are cheap, convenient, and heavily marketed. Many families rely on them due to cost, time, or cooking skills. Focus on practical swaps, not shame.
GP Pearl: "Patients do not need purity. They need fewer foods designed for effortless overconsumption."
6️⃣ Eggs & Cholesterol
Are they actually a problem?
Eggs: The Evidence
Eggs Are Usually Not the Main Cholesterol Problem: Decades of fear-mongering have made patients terrified of eggs. Current evidence shows dietary cholesterol has minimal impact on blood cholesterol for most people.
What Actually Raises Blood Cholesterol:
- • Saturated fat: Butter, cheese, fatty meat, coconut oil
- • Trans fats: Partially hydrogenated oils (mostly banned in UK)
- • Excess body weight: Obesity raises LDL and lowers HDL
- • Physical inactivity: Exercise improves lipid profile
Eggs in Context: One egg contains ~200mg dietary cholesterol but only 1.6g saturated fat. Compare to: 30g cheddar cheese (6g saturated fat), 2 rashers bacon (3g saturated fat), 1 tbsp butter (7g saturated fat).
Overall Dietary Pattern Matters More: Eating eggs as part of a Mediterranean-style diet (vegetables, whole grains, healthy fats) is very different from eating eggs with bacon, sausage, and buttered white toast.
Current UK Guidance: No specific limit on egg consumption for healthy individuals. British Heart Foundation: "There is no recommended limit on how many eggs people should eat."
Exceptions: Patients with familial hypercholesterolaemia or very high baseline cholesterol may benefit from limiting dietary cholesterol, but saturated fat reduction is still more important.
Consultation Script: "For most people, eggs are not the main issue — the wider diet matters much more. It's the bacon, sausage, and buttered toast that are the problem, not the eggs."
GP Pearl: "Eggs are usually fine. Overall dietary pattern matters more than individual foods."
7️⃣ Breakfast & Meal Timing
Do people need breakfast? Does meal timing matter?
The Breakfast Myth
Breakfast Is Not Essential for Everybody: The "breakfast is the most important meal of the day" message came from cereal marketing, not science. Some patients do better with it; some do better without it.
Individual Variation Matters: Some people wake up hungry and perform better with breakfast. Others feel nauseous in the morning and prefer to eat later. Neither is wrong.
What the Evidence Shows: Observational studies link breakfast skipping to obesity, but this is confounded by overall lifestyle. RCTs show no consistent benefit of breakfast for weight loss. Total daily intake matters more than timing.
Meal Timing Is Usually Less Important Than Total Intake: For most patients, when they eat matters less than what and how much they eat. Adherence to a consistent pattern is more important than the pattern itself.
Avoid Rigid Rules: Don't force breakfast on patients who aren't hungry. Don't discourage breakfast in patients who benefit from it. Focus on the pattern that helps them control intake, hunger, and routine.
Myth vs Fact:
Myth: "Everyone must eat breakfast to lose weight."
Fact: The right pattern is the one that helps the individual control intake, hunger, and routine.
Consultation Script: "You don't have to force breakfast if it doesn't help you control appetite. Some people do better eating later in the day. The key is finding a pattern you can stick to."
8️⃣ Supplements & Vitamins
Useful medicine or expensive urine?
When Supplements Are Genuinely Indicated
Indication: All UK adults should consider 10 micrograms (400 IU) daily, especially October-March. Higher doses for deficiency.
Why: UK sunlight insufficient for vitamin D synthesis in winter. Deficiency common, especially in darker skin, housebound, covered skin.
Evidence: Prevents rickets/osteomalacia. May reduce respiratory infections. No proven benefit for CVD, cancer, or COVID-19 prevention.
Dose: 10 micrograms (400 IU) daily for maintenance. 800-2000 IU for deficiency (check levels first).
GP Script: "Vitamin D is one of the few supplements most people in the UK should take, especially in winter. Our sunlight isn't strong enough to make enough vitamin D from October to March."
Indication: Vegans, pernicious anaemia, malabsorption (Crohn's, coeliac, post-gastrectomy), metformin use, PPI use.
Why: B12 only found in animal products. Vegans cannot get adequate B12 from diet alone.
Evidence: Prevents megaloblastic anaemia and neurological damage. Essential for DNA synthesis and nerve function.
Dose: 10-25 micrograms daily for vegans. 1000 micrograms IM every 2-3 months for pernicious anaemia.
GP Script: "If you're vegan, you need to supplement B12 — there's no plant source that provides enough. It's essential for your nerves and blood cells."
Indication: Rarely needed for healthy adults eating varied diet. May benefit: pregnancy (folic acid), elderly with poor intake, restrictive diets.
Evidence: No proven benefit for CVD, cancer, or mortality in well-nourished populations. May fill gaps in deficient diets.
Caution: High-dose multivitamins may be harmful (beta-carotene in smokers, vitamin E). Stick to RDA levels.
GP Script: "If you're eating a varied diet with plenty of vegetables, fruit, and protein, you probably don't need a multivitamin. But if your diet is very restricted, a basic multivitamin won't hurt."
Indication: Convenience for athletes, elderly with poor appetite, patients struggling to meet protein targets from food.
Evidence: Effective for increasing protein intake. No magic properties — just convenient protein source.
Types: Whey (fast-absorbing, complete amino acids), casein (slow-absorbing), plant-based (pea, soy, rice).
Dose: 20-30g protein per serving. Use to supplement food, not replace meals.
GP Script: "Protein powder is just convenient protein — it's not magic. If you're struggling to get enough protein from food, it can help. But whole foods should always come first."
Principle: Supplements should fill a gap, not compensate for a chaotic diet. Whole foods provide fibre, phytonutrients, and food matrix effects that supplements cannot replicate.
Examples:
- Calcium: Dairy, leafy greens, fortified plant milk > calcium tablets
- Iron: Red meat, beans, fortified cereals > iron supplements (unless deficient)
- Omega-3: Oily fish 2x/week > fish oil capsules
- Fibre: Vegetables, whole grains, legumes > fibre supplements
GP Script: "Supplements can't fix a bad diet. Focus on eating real food first — vegetables, fruit, whole grains, protein. Supplements are for filling specific gaps, not replacing meals."
Vitamin D: Prescribe colecalciferol 400-800 IU daily (maintenance) or 20,000 IU weekly for 7 weeks (loading). Check levels if symptoms of deficiency.
B12: Prescribe hydroxocobalamin 1mg IM for pernicious anaemia. Oral cyanocobalamin 50-150 micrograms daily for dietary deficiency.
Folic acid: 400 micrograms daily pre-conception and first 12 weeks pregnancy. 5mg daily for women on antiepileptics or previous NTD.
Iron: Prescribe ferrous sulfate 200mg TDS for iron deficiency anaemia. Check for underlying cause (menorrhagia, GI bleeding).
Avoid: Prescribing multivitamins, vitamin C, vitamin E, or other supplements without clear indication. Not cost-effective.
🧠 Mnemonic: NEED
- NNutritional gap — Is there a genuine dietary deficiency?
- EEvidence-based indication — Is there RCT evidence for this supplement?
- EExposure risk — Is the patient at risk of deficiency (vegan, housebound, malabsorption)?
- DDeficiency risk — What are the consequences of deficiency for this patient?
GP Pearl: "Supplements should fill a gap, not compensate for a chaotic diet."
9️⃣ Probiotics, Prebiotics & FODMAPs
Gut health: helpful science, over-marketed products
Gut Health: Separating Science from Marketing
What Are Probiotics: Live microorganisms that, when administered in adequate amounts, confer a health benefit. Found in yoghurt, kefir, fermented foods, and supplements.
Evidence Is Strain-Specific: Not all probiotics are equal. Benefits depend on specific bacterial strain, dose, and condition being treated. "Probiotic yoghurt" is not a magic cure-all.
Conditions with Evidence:
- IBS: Some strains (Bifidobacterium, Lactobacillus) reduce symptoms. Effect modest. Try for 4 weeks.
- Antibiotic-associated diarrhoea: Saccharomyces boulardii and some Lactobacillus strains reduce risk.
- C. difficile prevention: Weak evidence. Not a substitute for infection control.
Conditions with Weak/No Evidence: Eczema, allergies, weight loss, immune function, mental health (despite marketing claims).
GP Script: "Probiotics may help some people with IBS, but they're not a cure-all. The evidence is strain-specific, so not all probiotic products are the same. Try for 4 weeks — if it doesn't help, stop."
What Are Prebiotics: Non-digestible food components (mostly fibre) that promote growth of beneficial gut bacteria. Found naturally in many plant foods.
Food Sources: Onions, garlic, leeks, asparagus, bananas, oats, apples, flaxseed, legumes, whole grains.
Evidence: Prebiotic-rich diets improve gut microbiome diversity and may improve metabolic health. Whole foods are better than supplements.
Caution: High prebiotic intake can cause bloating and gas, especially in IBS. Increase gradually.
GP Script: "Prebiotics are just fibre that feeds your gut bacteria. You don't need supplements — just eat more vegetables, whole grains, and legumes. Start slowly if you're not used to it."
What Are FODMAPs: Fermentable Oligosaccharides, Disaccharides, Monosaccharides, And Polyols. Short-chain carbohydrates poorly absorbed in small intestine, fermented by gut bacteria, causing gas and bloating.
High FODMAP Foods: Wheat, onions, garlic, legumes, dairy (lactose), apples, pears, stone fruits, artificial sweeteners (sorbitol, mannitol).
Low FODMAP Is a Diagnostic Tool for IBS: Structured 3-phase approach: elimination (4-6 weeks), reintroduction (test each FODMAP group), personalisation (avoid only triggers).
Not a Long-Term Diet: Prolonged restriction harms gut microbiome diversity. Should be supervised by dietitian. Many patients self-restrict unnecessarily after Googling.
Not for General Health: No benefit for non-IBS patients. High FODMAP foods (legumes, whole grains, vegetables) are healthy for most people.
GP Script: "Low FODMAP is a short-term tool to identify IBS triggers, not a permanent diet. Long-term restriction can harm your gut microbiome. You should work with a dietitian to reintroduce foods properly."
Referral: Refer to dietitian for structured low FODMAP guidance if IBS symptoms persist despite first-line management.
Consultation Line: "Low FODMAP is a targeted IBS tool, not a general healthy eating plan."
🔟 Plant Sterols, Functional Foods & Superfoods
Do cholesterol yoghurts and 'superfoods' really do much?
Functional Foods: Realistic Expectations
What They Are: Plant compounds structurally similar to cholesterol. Found in fortified foods (Benecol, Flora ProActiv spreads, yoghurts, milk).
Mechanism: Compete with cholesterol for absorption in gut, reducing LDL cholesterol by ~10% at effective dose.
Evidence: Modest LDL reduction (0.3-0.4 mmol/L). No proven benefit for CVD outcomes. Not a substitute for statins.
Dose Matters: Need 2g/day for effect. One yoghurt drink (100ml) contains ~2g. Expensive (£3-4/week).
Who Might Benefit: Patients with borderline high cholesterol who decline statins, or as adjunct to statin therapy.
GP Script: "Plant sterol products can lower cholesterol by about 10%, but they're expensive and not as effective as statins. If your cholesterol is high enough to need treatment, a statin is usually better value."
The Term "Superfood" Is Marketing: No scientific definition. Used to sell expensive products (acai, goji berries, spirulina, chia seeds, kale, quinoa).
Reality: These foods are nutrient-dense, but no single food is magic. A varied diet beats a handful of "special" foods.
Examples:
- Blueberries: High in antioxidants. But so are strawberries, blackberries, and raspberries (cheaper).
- Kale: High in vitamins A, C, K. But so are spinach, broccoli, and cabbage (cheaper).
- Quinoa: Complete protein, high fibre. But so are beans, lentils, and oats (cheaper).
- Chia seeds: High in omega-3. But so are flaxseed and walnuts (cheaper).
GP Script: "There's no such thing as a superfood. These foods are healthy, but they're not magic. A varied diet with plenty of vegetables, fruit, whole grains, and protein is what matters — not expensive trendy foods."
GP Pearl: "A generally good diet beats a handful of 'special' foods."
1️⃣1️⃣ Takeaways & Real-Life Eating
Helping patients make better choices in the real world
Best of a Bad Bunch: Practical Takeaway Advice
Avoid Moral Judgement: Takeaways are convenient, affordable, and part of modern life. Many families rely on them. Focus on practical harm reduction, not shame.
Better Choices:
- Tomato-based curries (jalfrezi, rogan josh, madras) over creamy curries (korma, pasanda, tikka masala)
- Tandoori or tikka (grilled) over fried starters (samosas, pakoras, bhajis)
- Plain rice or chapati over pilau rice, naan, or peshwari naan
- Dahl (lentils) as a side — adds protein and fibre
- Avoid: extra ghee, cream, or butter chicken
Portion Control: Share a main, or save half for tomorrow. Restaurant portions are often 2-3 servings.
Better Choices:
- Steamed or stir-fried dishes over deep-fried (sweet and sour, crispy duck, spring rolls)
- Dishes with vegetables (chop suey, chow mein with veg)
- Plain boiled rice over egg fried rice
- Avoid: battered dishes, prawn crackers, extra sauces
Watch Out For: High salt content in sauces. High sugar in sweet and sour sauce.
Better Choices:
- Thin crust over deep pan or stuffed crust
- Vegetable toppings (peppers, mushrooms, tomatoes, spinach)
- Lean protein (chicken, ham) over processed meat (pepperoni, sausage)
- Less cheese (ask for "light cheese")
- Side salad instead of garlic bread or chips
Portion Control: One or two slices, not the whole pizza. Share or save half.
Better Choices:
- Grilled fish over battered fish (if available)
- Smaller portion of chips (kids' portion or share)
- Mushy peas or baked beans as a side (adds fibre)
- Avoid: extra salt, curry sauce, gravy
Reality Check: Traditional fish and chips is ~1200 calories. Occasional treat, not weekly habit.
Better Choices:
- Grilled chicken burger over beef burger or fried chicken
- Single patty over double or triple
- Skip the cheese and bacon
- Side salad instead of fries
- Water or diet drink instead of regular fizzy drink
- Avoid: large meal deals, milkshakes, extra sauces
Watch Out For: "Healthy" options can still be high calorie (e.g., salads with creamy dressing).
💡 Healthier Takeaway Damage-Limitation Tips
- • Choose grilled, baked, steamed, or tomato-based options
- • Prioritise protein (lean meat, fish, legumes)
- • Add vegetables where possible
- • Avoid sugary drinks — choose water or diet options
- • Skip extra fried sides (garlic bread, onion rings, prawn crackers)
- • Watch portion size — share or save half for tomorrow
Consultation Script: "You don't have to give up takeaways completely. Just make smarter choices: grilled over fried, tomato-based over creamy, plain rice over fried rice, and watch your portion sizes. Small changes add up."
1️⃣2️⃣ How to Lose Weight with Nutrition
The GP-friendly, evidence-based weight-loss message
Evidence-Based Weight Loss Strategy
Modest Calorie Deficit: Aim for 500-750 kcal/day deficit for 0.5-1kg/week weight loss. Faster weight loss increases muscle loss and is harder to sustain.
Higher Protein: Target 1.2-1.6g/kg body weight. Increases satiety, preserves muscle mass, and has highest thermic effect. Palm-sized portion at each meal.
More Fibre: Target 30g/day from vegetables, fruit, whole grains, legumes. Increases fullness, slows digestion, improves gut health.
Less Liquid Sugar: Biggest single change for many patients. Swap sugary drinks (cola, juice, energy drinks) for water, tea, coffee, or diet versions. One 500ml cola = 54g sugar (18 teaspoons).
Less Snacking on Ultra-Processed Foods: Crisps, biscuits, chocolate, cakes are calorie-dense and easy to overeat. Replace with fruit, nuts, yoghurt, or just eat proper meals.
Repeatable Meals: Meal prep, batch cooking, and eating similar meals most days reduces decision fatigue and improves adherence. Variety is overrated for weight loss.
Do Not Rely on Exercise Alone: Exercise is crucial for health, but diet creates the calorie deficit. A 30-minute run burns ~300 calories (one chocolate bar). You cannot outrun a bad diet.
🧠 Mnemonic: PROTEIN
- PPlan meals — Meal prep and batch cooking improve adherence
- RReduce liquid calories — Swap sugary drinks for water/diet versions
- OOutsource less food — Cook more, eat out less, reduce ultra-processed foods
- TTrack something simple — Weight, photos, or one key behaviour (not obsessive calorie counting)
- EEat enough protein — 1.2-1.6g/kg body weight, palm-sized portion per meal
- IIncrease fibre — Target 30g/day from vegetables, fruit, whole grains, legumes
- NNormalise repetition — Eating similar meals most days is fine and improves adherence
Consultation Phrase: "You do not need a perfect diet. You need one you can repeat on ordinary days."
Realistic Expectations: 0.5-1kg/week is sustainable. 5-10% body weight loss improves health significantly. Weight loss is not linear — expect plateaus. Maintenance is harder than losing — plan for it.
1️⃣3️⃣ The Four Pillars of Exercise Medicine
What GPs should think about when they prescribe movement
The Four Pillars
1. Strength (Resistance Training): Builds and maintains muscle mass, bone density, and functional capacity. Prevents sarcopenia. Essential for healthy ageing. Target: 2+ sessions/week, all major muscle groups.
2. Aerobic Fitness (Cardiovascular): Improves heart, lung, and metabolic health. Reduces CVD, diabetes, and all-cause mortality. Target: 150 min/week moderate intensity or 75 min/week vigorous intensity.
3. Balance: Reduces falls risk, especially in older adults. Improves proprioception and coordination. Target: Balance exercises 2-3x/week (single-leg stands, tai chi, yoga).
4. Mobility/Flexibility: Maintains range of motion, reduces stiffness, supports movement quality. Not a magic injury shield, but useful for comfort and function. Target: Stretching 2-3x/week, especially after exercise.
🧠 Mnemonic: SABM
- SStrength — Resistance training 2+ times/week
- AAerobic — 150 min/week moderate or 75 min/week vigorous
- BBalance — Falls prevention, especially for older adults
- MMobility — Flexibility and range of motion
GP Pearl: "Walking alone is not enough for many older adults. Strength and balance matter too."
Consultation Script: "Think of exercise like a balanced diet — you need different types for different benefits. Walking is great for your heart, but you also need strength training to protect your muscles and bones, and balance exercises to prevent falls."
1️⃣4️⃣ Exercise for Weight Loss vs Exercise for Longevity
Same activity advice? Not always.
Different Goals, Different Emphasis
For Weight Loss
Diet Has the Larger Effect: A 30-minute run burns ~300 calories (one chocolate bar). You cannot outrun a bad diet. Exercise supports weight loss but doesn't create the deficit alone.
Exercise Supports Adherence: Improves mood, reduces stress, provides structure, and helps maintain motivation. Psychological benefits matter.
Preserves Muscle During Calorie Restriction: Resistance training prevents muscle loss during weight loss. Cardio alone can lead to muscle loss.
For Longevity & Function
Aerobic Exercise Plus Strength Work Is Crucial: Both reduce all-cause mortality. Cardio improves cardiovascular health. Strength prevents sarcopenia and maintains independence.
Muscle Preservation Matters for Ageing: Sarcopenia (muscle loss) starts at age 30. Resistance training is the only intervention that reverses it. Essential for healthy ageing.
Fitness Matters More Than Fatness: Fit and overweight is healthier than unfit and normal weight. Cardiorespiratory fitness is a strong predictor of longevity.
Myth vs Fact:
Myth: "Diet and exercise contribute equally to weight loss."
Fact: Diet usually contributes more to weight loss; exercise contributes hugely to long-term health, muscle, and function.
Consultation Script: "Exercise is brilliant for your health, but it's not the main driver of weight loss — that's your diet. Think of it this way: use food to change the number on the scales, and use exercise to change everything else — your fitness, strength, mood, and long-term health."
1️⃣5️⃣ Progressive Overload
Why patients don't get stronger by doing the same easy thing forever
The Principle of Progressive Overload
What It Is: Gradually increasing the stress placed on the body during exercise. Muscles adapt to stress, so you must progressively increase load, reps, or difficulty to continue improving.
Why It Matters: Doing the same easy workout forever maintains fitness but doesn't build strength or muscle. Adaptation requires challenge. If it feels easy, it's maintenance, not progression.
How to Apply It:
- • Increase weight: Add 2.5-5kg when current weight feels easy
- • Increase reps: Aim for 8-12 reps, then increase weight when you can do 12 easily
- • Increase sets: Add an extra set when current volume feels manageable
- • Increase difficulty: Progress from assisted to unassisted exercises (e.g., assisted pull-ups → full pull-ups)
- • Reduce rest time: Shorter rest between sets increases intensity
Link to Muscle Growth: Progressive overload is the primary driver of muscle hypertrophy. Muscle grows in response to mechanical tension, metabolic stress, and muscle damage — all require progressive challenge.
Anti-Sarcopenia Strategy: Older adults need progressive overload even more than younger adults. Muscle loss accelerates with age, and only progressive resistance training reverses it.
Consultation Script: "If it feels easy, it's maintenance. If you want to get stronger, you need to challenge yourself a bit more each week. That might mean adding a bit more weight, doing a few more reps, or trying a harder version of the exercise."
Caution: Progress gradually. Jumping too fast increases injury risk. Aim for small, consistent increases (2.5-5% per week).
GP Pearl: "Habit is important, but adaptation needs progression."
1️⃣6️⃣ Sarcopenia & Healthy Ageing
Muscle loss with age: why this matters in primary care
What Is Sarcopenia?
Definition: Age-related loss of skeletal muscle mass, strength, and function. Recognised as a disease (ICD-10 code M62.84). Accelerates after age 50, with significant functional impact after age 70.
UK Statistics:
- • Adults lose ~250g muscle per year between ages 30-60
- • Muscle loss accelerates to 15% per decade after age 70
- • Prevalence: 5.3% at ages 40-70 (UK Biobank), 12-28% in over-70s
- • Strength declines faster than mass: 1.5% per year ages 50-60, 3% per year after 60
Why It Matters: Sarcopenia is not just about frailty. It's associated with:
- • Falls and fractures
- • Loss of independence
- • Insulin resistance and type 2 diabetes
- • Increased mortality
- • Reduced quality of life
Causes: Ageing (primary), physical inactivity (accelerates loss), inadequate protein intake, chronic disease (COPD, CKD, heart failure, cancer), inflammation, hormonal changes (testosterone, growth hormone decline).
Screening: Consider in patients >65 years, especially with: low physical activity, chronic disease, recent weight loss, recurrent falls, slow gait speed (<0.8 m/s).
Simple tests: Grip strength (<27kg men, <16kg women suggests sarcopenia), chair stand test (unable to rise from chair 5 times in <15 seconds), gait speed (<0.8 m/s).
Treatment: Resistance training 2-3x/week (most effective intervention) + adequate protein (1.0-1.2g/kg body weight). No pharmacological treatment proven effective.
🧠 Mnemonic: MUSCLE
- MMove against resistance — Resistance training 2-3x/week is essential
- UUse enough protein — Target 1.0-1.2g/kg body weight daily
- SStart before frailty — Prevention is easier than reversal
- CCombine with balance — Falls prevention requires both strength and balance
- LLoad gradually — Progressive overload drives adaptation
- EEncourage function daily — Stairs, carrying shopping, gardening all count
Consultation Script: "Muscle loss starts at age 30 and accelerates after 70. This isn't just about looking frail — it affects your independence, your risk of falls, and even your blood sugar control. The good news is that resistance training can reverse it, even in your 80s. It's never too late to start."
GP Exam Pearl: "Older adults do not just need more walking. They often need deliberate strength and balance training."
1️⃣7️⃣ Which Type of Exercise Is Best?
Compare exercise modalities without oversimplifying
Exercise Modalities Compared
| Exercise Type | Weight Loss | Fitness | Longevity | Joint Impact | Beginner Friendly |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Walking | Moderate (burns ~200-300 kcal/hr) | Moderate (improves cardiovascular health) | High (reduces all-cause mortality) | Low (minimal joint stress) | Excellent (accessible to most) |
| Running | High (burns ~600-800 kcal/hr) | High (excellent cardiovascular training) | High (strong mortality benefit) | Moderate (repetitive impact) | Moderate (requires gradual build-up) |
| Rowing | High (burns ~500-700 kcal/hr) | High (full-body cardiovascular) | High (low injury risk) | Low (non-weight bearing) | Moderate (technique important) |
| Cycling | Moderate-High (burns ~400-600 kcal/hr) | High (excellent cardiovascular) | High (strong mortality benefit) | Low (non-weight bearing) | Good (accessible, low impact) |
| HIIT | High (burns calories + EPOC effect) | Very High (rapid fitness gains) | High (time-efficient) | Variable (depends on exercises) | Moderate (requires baseline fitness) |
| Resistance Training | Moderate (burns ~200-400 kcal/hr) | Moderate (improves strength, not cardio) | Very High (prevents sarcopenia) | Low-Moderate (controlled movements) | Good (scalable to all levels) |
| Swimming | Moderate-High (burns ~400-600 kcal/hr) | High (full-body cardiovascular) | High (low injury risk) | Very Low (buoyancy reduces stress) | Good (requires swimming ability) |
| Group Classes | Moderate-High (variable by class type) | Moderate-High (depends on class) | Moderate-High (social benefits) | Variable (depends on class type) | Good (motivating, structured) |
GP Pearl: "There is no best exercise in the abstract — only the best one for this person, this goal, and this stage."
Consultation Script: "The best exercise is the one you'll actually do consistently. If you hate running, don't run. If you love swimming, swim. The key is finding something you enjoy enough to stick with long-term."
1️⃣8️⃣ Free Weights vs Machines
Which is better?
Free Weights vs Machines: Evidence-Based Comparison
Free Weights (Dumbbells, Barbells)
Advantages:
- • Recruit stabiliser muscles
- • Mimic real-world movement patterns
- • Greater muscle activation
- • Versatile (many exercises possible)
- • Improve balance and coordination
Disadvantages:
- • Require good technique
- • Higher injury risk if done incorrectly
- • Can be intimidating for beginners
- • Need spotter for heavy lifts
Machines
Advantages:
- • Easier to learn (guided movement)
- • Safer for beginners
- • Good for isolating specific muscles
- • Build confidence
- • No spotter needed
Disadvantages:
- • Fixed movement path (less functional)
- • Don't train stabiliser muscles as much
- • May not fit all body types
- • Less versatile
Compound Movements Are Efficient: Exercises that work multiple muscle groups (squats, deadlifts, bench press, rows) are more time-efficient than isolation exercises. But both have a place.
Safety, Technique, and Consistency Matter Most: The best method is the one you can do safely, consistently, and progressively. Don't get caught up in gym tribalism.
Consultation Line: "The best method is the one you can do safely, consistently, and progressively. Machines are great for beginners and building confidence. Free weights are great for functional strength. Most people benefit from a mix of both."
1️⃣9️⃣ Walking, Steps & Hills
Does it need to be 10,000 steps? Does walking uphill matter more?
The Truth About Step Counts
10,000 Is Not a Magic Biological Threshold: The 10,000 steps target came from a 1960s Japanese marketing campaign for a pedometer, not from science. It's a reasonable goal, but not essential.
More Movement Is Usually Better Than Less: Evidence shows mortality benefit increases with step count up to ~7,000-10,000 steps/day, then plateaus. Even 4,000-5,000 steps/day is better than <3,000.
Walking Uphill Increases Intensity: Incline walking burns more calories, recruits more muscle (glutes, hamstrings), and improves cardiovascular fitness more than flat walking. Even a 5% incline makes a significant difference.
Fast Walking May Add Benefit: Brisk walking (>100 steps/min, or "can talk but not sing") provides greater cardiovascular benefit than slow walking. But ordinary walking still counts.
Even Moving from Very Low Baseline Activity Can Be Meaningful: For sedentary patients, increasing from 2,000 to 4,000 steps/day has significant health benefits. Don't let perfect be the enemy of good.
Myth vs Fact:
Myth: "If you're not breathless, it doesn't count."
Fact: Lower-intensity movement still matters, especially if it replaces inactivity.
Consultation Script: "Don't worry about hitting exactly 10,000 steps — that's just a marketing number. Any increase in movement is beneficial. If you're currently doing 3,000 steps, aim for 5,000. If you're doing 7,000, aim for 9,000. And if you can add some hills or walk a bit faster, even better."
2️⃣0️⃣ Stretching & Warm-ups
Do they prevent injury? What does the evidence say?
Stretching & Warm-ups: Evidence vs Tradition
What It Is: Holding a stretch for 15-60 seconds (e.g., touching toes, quad stretch).
Evidence: Does NOT reduce injury risk. May temporarily reduce power and strength if done immediately before explosive activities (sprinting, jumping). Better done after exercise or as separate flexibility session.
When It's Useful: Improves flexibility and range of motion over time. Reduces muscle stiffness. May help with chronic tightness (e.g., tight hamstrings, hip flexors).
GP Script: "Static stretching before exercise doesn't prevent injuries, and it might even reduce your power temporarily. Save it for after your workout, or do it as a separate flexibility session."
What It Is: Movement-based warm-up (leg swings, arm circles, walking lunges, high knees, butt kicks).
Evidence: Improves performance by increasing blood flow, muscle temperature, and neural activation. May reduce injury risk by preparing muscles for activity.
How to Do It: 5-10 minutes of gradually increasing intensity. Mimic the movements you'll do in your workout. Start slow, build to moderate intensity.
GP Script: "A dynamic warm-up — moving your joints through their range of motion — is more useful than static stretching before exercise. Think leg swings, arm circles, and walking lunges, not holding stretches."
Evidence: Systematic reviews show stretching (static or dynamic) has minimal effect on injury prevention. Most injuries are due to training errors (too much, too soon), not lack of flexibility.
What Actually Prevents Injury:
- Progressive overload (gradual increase in training load)
- Adequate recovery (rest days, sleep, nutrition)
- Good technique (proper form reduces stress on joints)
- Strength training (stronger muscles protect joints)
- Avoiding sudden spikes in training volume
GP Script: "Stretching won't prevent most injuries. What prevents injuries is building up gradually, recovering properly, and using good technique. Don't skip your warm-up, but don't rely on stretching alone to keep you injury-free."
When It's Useful: If you have chronic tightness (tight hamstrings, hip flexors, shoulders), regular stretching can improve range of motion and reduce discomfort.
How to Do It: Hold each stretch for 15-30 seconds, 2-3 times per muscle group. Do it after exercise or as a separate session (not before intense activity).
Frequency: 2-3 times per week for flexibility maintenance. Daily for significant improvement.
GP Script: "Stretching is useful for improving flexibility and reducing stiffness, especially if you sit a lot or have tight muscles. Just don't expect it to prevent injuries — that's not what the evidence shows."
GP Pearl: "Warm-ups prepare you for activity. Stretching improves flexibility. Neither is a magic injury shield."
2️⃣1️⃣ Injury Management: RICE vs PEACE & LOVE
What's the current best practice for acute soft tissue injuries?
From RICE to PEACE & LOVE
Old Approach: RICE (Rest, Ice, Compression, Elevation)
Widely taught for decades, but evidence for ice and prolonged rest is weak. Ice may delay healing by reducing inflammation (which is part of the healing process).
New Approach: PEACE & LOVE (British Journal of Sports Medicine, 2019)
Evidence-based framework for acute soft tissue injuries (sprains, strains, muscle tears).
🧠 Mnemonic: PEACE (Immediate Management, First 2-3 Days)
- PProtection — Avoid activities that increase pain for 1-3 days. Use crutches, brace, or tape if needed. But avoid prolonged immobilisation.
- EElevation — Elevate injured limb above heart level to reduce swelling.
- AAvoid anti-inflammatories — NSAIDs may impair long-term healing by reducing inflammation (which is part of tissue repair). Use paracetamol if needed.
- CCompression — Use compression bandage or sleeve to reduce swelling. Don't wrap too tightly.
- EEducation — Explain that active recovery is better than passive rest. Set realistic expectations for recovery time.
🧠 Mnemonic: LOVE (Subacute Management, After 2-3 Days)
- LLoad — Resume normal activities as soon as symptoms allow. Gradual loading promotes tissue repair. Pain is acceptable if it doesn't worsen significantly.
- OOptimism — Positive expectations improve outcomes. Avoid catastrophising. Most soft tissue injuries heal well with time and appropriate loading.
- VVascularisation — Cardiovascular exercise increases blood flow to injured area, promoting healing. Start pain-free aerobic activity early (e.g., cycling, swimming).
- EExercise — Active rehabilitation with progressive strengthening and mobility exercises. Restores function and reduces re-injury risk.
What About Ice? Ice may reduce pain in the first 24-48 hours, but evidence for benefit is weak. It may delay healing by reducing inflammation. Use if it provides comfort, but don't rely on it as primary treatment.
When to Refer: Suspected fracture, complete ligament rupture, severe pain/swelling, inability to weight-bear, no improvement after 2 weeks, recurrent injuries.
Consultation Script: "The old advice was rest and ice, but we now know that active recovery works better. After the first few days, you should gradually start moving and loading the injured area — that's what helps it heal properly. Pain is okay as long as it's not getting worse."
2️⃣2️⃣ How to Prescribe Exercise in Primary Care
Practical, evidence-based exercise prescription for GPs
Exercise Prescription Framework
UK Chief Medical Officers' Physical Activity Guidelines (2019):
- • Adults (19-64 years): 150 min/week moderate intensity OR 75 min/week vigorous intensity aerobic activity + strength training 2x/week
- • Older adults (65+ years): Same as adults + balance and flexibility exercises 2x/week
- • Key message: Some activity is better than none. Build up gradually.
Ask: "How much physical activity do you do in a typical week?"
Classify:
- Inactive: <30 min/week
- Insufficiently active: 30-149 min/week
- Active: ≥150 min/week
Also ask about: Strength training, balance exercises, sedentary time (sitting/screen time).
Use SMART Goals: Specific, Measurable, Achievable, Relevant, Time-bound.
Examples:
- Inactive patient: "Walk for 10 minutes, 3 times this week."
- Insufficiently active: "Increase walking to 30 minutes, 5 days/week."
- Active but no strength training: "Add 2 strength sessions/week (bodyweight exercises or gym)."
Avoid: Vague goals like "exercise more" or "get fit."
FITT Principle:
- Frequency: How many days per week? (e.g., "5 days/week")
- Intensity: How hard? (e.g., "brisk walking — can talk but not sing")
- Time: How long? (e.g., "30 minutes per session")
- Type: What activity? (e.g., "walking, cycling, swimming, or gym")
Example Prescription: "Walk briskly for 30 minutes, 5 days per week. Start with 10 minutes if needed, and build up gradually."
Common Barriers:
- Time: "I'm too busy." → Suggest short bouts (10 min x 3/day), active commuting, lunchtime walks.
- Cost: "Gym is expensive." → Suggest walking, home workouts, YouTube videos, NHS Couch to 5K app.
- Motivation: "I don't enjoy exercise." → Find activities they enjoy, suggest social activities (group classes, walking groups).
- Pain/injury: "My knees hurt." → Suggest low-impact activities (swimming, cycling), refer to physio if needed.
- Weather: "It's too cold/wet." → Suggest indoor alternatives (home workouts, shopping centre walking).
Schedule Follow-up: 2-4 weeks for inactive patients, 3 months for active patients.
Review: Did they achieve their goal? What barriers did they face? Adjust plan as needed.
Celebrate Progress: Acknowledge any increase in activity, even if they didn't meet the full goal.
Adjust Goals: If they succeeded, increase gradually. If they struggled, reduce and simplify.
💡 Practical Exercise Prescription Examples
Inactive patient with obesity: "Walk for 10 minutes after dinner, 3 times this week. Build up to 30 minutes, 5 days/week over the next 2 months."
Older adult with falls risk: "Join a local balance class (tai chi or Otago exercise programme) 2x/week. Add daily single-leg stands while brushing teeth."
Patient with type 2 diabetes: "Walk briskly for 30 minutes, 5 days/week. Add 2 strength sessions/week (bodyweight exercises or gym). Aim for 150 min/week total."
Patient with depression: "Walk outside for 20 minutes, 3-5 days/week. Natural light and movement both help mood. Consider joining a walking group for social support."
GP Pearl: "Prescribe exercise like a medication: specific dose, frequency, and duration. Follow up to check adherence and adjust as needed."
2️⃣3️⃣ Exercise Referral Schemes & Resources
What's available in the UK?
UK Exercise Referral Options
What They Are: GP-referred programmes where patients receive supervised exercise sessions at local leisure centres, usually at reduced cost or free.
Who They're For: Patients with chronic conditions (obesity, type 2 diabetes, hypertension, depression, osteoarthritis) who would benefit from structured exercise support.
Evidence: Modest benefit for increasing physical activity in the short term. Long-term adherence is variable. Most effective when combined with behaviour change support.
Availability: Varies by local authority. Check your local council or ICB for availability.
NICE Guidance (PH54, 2014): Recommends ERS only as part of broader physical activity strategy, not as standalone intervention.
NHS Couch to 5K: Free app for beginners. 9-week running programme with audio coaching. Evidence-based, popular, and effective.
Active 10: Free app encouraging 10-minute brisk walks. Tracks activity and provides motivational prompts.
NHS Fitness Studio: Free online exercise videos (strength, cardio, yoga, pilates). Suitable for home workouts.
NHS Better Health: Website with physical activity advice, tools, and resources.
parkrun: Free, weekly, timed 5km runs/walks in parks across the UK. Inclusive, social, and evidence-based for improving physical and mental health.
Walking for Health: Free, volunteer-led walking groups across the UK. Suitable for all fitness levels.
Age UK Exercise Classes: Chair-based exercise, strength and balance classes for older adults.
Local leisure centres: Many offer discounted memberships for patients with chronic conditions or low income.
Cardiac Rehabilitation: Supervised exercise programme for patients post-MI, post-cardiac surgery, or with heart failure. Improves outcomes and reduces mortality.
Pulmonary Rehabilitation: Exercise and education programme for patients with COPD. Improves exercise capacity, reduces breathlessness, and improves quality of life.
Falls Prevention Programmes (Otago, FaME): Strength and balance exercises for older adults at risk of falls. Evidence-based, reduces falls by ~30%.
Cancer Rehabilitation: Exercise programmes for patients during and after cancer treatment. Improves fatigue, function, and quality of life.
GP Pearl: "Exercise referral schemes work best when combined with behaviour change support and when patients are motivated. Don't rely on them as a magic fix."
2️⃣4️⃣ Motivational Interviewing for Exercise & Nutrition
How to help patients change behaviour without lecturing
Motivational Interviewing Principles
What Is Motivational Interviewing (MI)? A patient-centred counselling approach that helps people explore and resolve ambivalence about behaviour change. More effective than advice-giving or lecturing.
🧠 Mnemonic: OARS
- OOpen-ended questions — "What would you like to change about your diet?" (not "Do you want to lose weight?")
- AAffirmations — "You've already made progress by coming here today." Recognise strengths and efforts.
- RReflective listening — "It sounds like you're worried about your health, but you're not sure where to start." Mirror back what you hear.
- SSummaries — "So you'd like to lose weight, but you're finding it hard to fit exercise into your busy schedule. Is that right?"
Ask: "On a scale of 1-10, how important is it for you to change your diet/exercise?" (Importance)
Ask: "On a scale of 1-10, how confident are you that you could make this change?" (Confidence)
Follow up: "Why did you choose [number] and not a lower number?" (Elicits change talk)
Tailor approach:
- Low importance: Explore pros/cons of change. Don't push.
- High importance, low confidence: Build self-efficacy. Start small. Identify past successes.
- High importance, high confidence: Help them make a specific plan.
Change talk: Patient's own statements about desire, ability, reasons, or need to change. Predicts behaviour change.
Questions to elicit change talk:
- "What would be the benefits of exercising more?"
- "What concerns you most about your current weight?"
- "How would your life be different if you were more active?"
- "What makes you think you might need to change?"
Reflect change talk back: "So you're saying that losing weight would help your knees and give you more energy. That sounds really important to you."
Righting reflex: The urge to fix the problem by giving advice, lecturing, or telling the patient what to do. This often triggers resistance.
Instead: Ask permission before giving advice. "Would it be okay if I shared some information about exercise and weight loss?"
Offer options: "Some people find it helpful to start with short walks. Others prefer joining a gym. What do you think might work for you?"
Respect autonomy: "It's your decision. I'm here to support you whatever you choose."
When patient is ready: "What's one small change you could make this week?"
Make it specific: "Walk for 10 minutes after dinner, 3 times this week" (not "exercise more").
Identify barriers: "What might get in the way of doing this?"
Problem-solve: "How could you overcome that barrier?"
Build confidence: "What makes you think you can do this?"
Follow up: "Let's review how it went in 2 weeks."
💡 Example MI Conversation
GP: "What would you like to talk about today?"
Patient: "I know I need to lose weight, but I just can't seem to stick to anything."
GP: "It sounds like you've tried before and found it difficult. What's made it hard in the past?" (Open question, reflective listening)
Patient: "I start off well, but then I get busy and stop exercising."
GP: "So time is a big barrier for you. On a scale of 1-10, how important is it for you to lose weight right now?" (Assess importance)
Patient: "Probably an 8. My knees are really hurting."
GP: "That's quite high. Why did you say 8 and not a lower number?" (Elicit change talk)
Patient: "Because I'm worried I won't be able to keep up with my grandkids if I don't do something."
GP: "So staying active with your grandkids is really important to you. That's a great reason. How confident are you that you could make a change?" (Affirmation, assess confidence)
Patient: "Maybe a 5. I'm not sure where to start."
GP: "Okay, so you're motivated, but you need a clear plan. What's one small thing you could do this week that would fit into your schedule?" (Build self-efficacy, develop plan)
Patient: "I could walk for 10 minutes after dinner."
GP: "That sounds very doable. How many days do you think you could manage that?" (Specific goal)
Patient: "Maybe 3 days."
GP: "Great. Let's aim for that and see how it goes. What might get in the way?" (Identify barriers)
GP Pearl: "People are more likely to change when they talk themselves into it, not when you lecture them into it."
2️⃣5️⃣ Common Myths & Misconceptions
Debunking the most persistent exercise and nutrition myths
Myth-Busting for GPs
Fact: Spot reduction doesn't work. You cannot choose where you lose fat. Fat loss is systemic (whole body), determined by genetics and hormones. Doing 100 sit-ups won't burn belly fat specifically.
GP Script: "You can't target fat loss from specific areas. Where you lose fat is determined by your genetics, not by which exercises you do. Focus on overall calorie deficit and strength training."
Fact: Women have ~10-30x less testosterone than men, making it very difficult to build large muscles. Strength training makes women stronger and leaner, not bulky. "Bulky" bodybuilders train for years with specific nutrition and often use performance-enhancing drugs.
GP Script: "Lifting weights won't make you bulky. Women don't have enough testosterone to build large muscles easily. Strength training will make you stronger, leaner, and healthier."
Fact: Excess calories make you fat, not carbs specifically. Carbs are not inherently fattening. Many healthy populations eat high-carb diets (Japan, Mediterranean). The problem is usually ultra-processed, calorie-dense carbs (biscuits, cakes, sugary drinks), not vegetables, fruit, or whole grains.
GP Script: "Carbs don't make you fat — excess calories do. The problem is usually ultra-processed carbs like biscuits and sugary drinks, not vegetables, fruit, or whole grains."
Fact: Your liver and kidneys detox your body continuously. "Detox" products (teas, juices, supplements) are marketing scams with no scientific basis. If your liver and kidneys are working, you don't need to detox.
GP Script: "Your liver and kidneys detox your body 24/7. You don't need special teas, juices, or supplements. If your liver and kidneys are working, you're already detoxing."
Fact: Total daily calorie intake matters more than meal timing. Eating late doesn't magically cause fat gain. However, late-night eating is often associated with snacking on high-calorie foods (crisps, biscuits, ice cream), which is why it's linked to weight gain in observational studies.
GP Script: "Eating late doesn't make you fat — eating too many calories does. The problem is usually what people eat late at night (snacks, desserts), not the timing itself."
Fact: Muscle and fat are different tissues. Muscle cannot turn into fat. When you stop exercising, you lose muscle (atrophy) and may gain fat (if calorie intake exceeds expenditure), but one doesn't transform into the other.
GP Script: "Muscle doesn't turn into fat. They're different tissues. If you stop exercising, you lose muscle and may gain fat, but one doesn't become the other."
Fact: Fluid needs vary by individual, activity level, climate, and diet. There's no magic number. Thirst is a reliable indicator for most people. Urine colour is a good guide (pale yellow = well hydrated, dark yellow = drink more).
GP Script: "There's no magic number for water intake. Drink when you're thirsty, and check your urine colour — pale yellow is good, dark yellow means drink more."
Fact: Meal frequency doesn't significantly affect metabolism. Total daily calorie intake matters more than how often you eat. Some people do better with frequent small meals, others with fewer larger meals. Neither is superior.
GP Script: "Meal frequency doesn't boost metabolism. Eat in a pattern that helps you control hunger and stick to your calorie target. Some people prefer 3 meals, others prefer 6 small meals. Both are fine."
GP Pearl: "If it sounds too good to be true, it probably is. Stick to evidence-based advice, not social media trends."
2️⃣6️⃣ Quick Reference: Key Takeaways
One-page summary for busy GPs
Essential GP Takeaways
Nutrition
- ✓ Calorie deficit drives weight loss — not specific diets
- ✓ Protein: 1.2-1.6g/kg for weight loss, muscle preservation
- ✓ Fibre: 30g/day from vegetables, fruit, whole grains, legumes
- ✓ Reduce liquid sugar — biggest single change for many
- ✓ Ultra-processed foods — easy to overeat, limit where possible
- ✓ No magic foods — variety and consistency matter most
Exercise
- ✓ 150 min/week moderate OR 75 min/week vigorous aerobic
- ✓ Strength training 2x/week — essential for muscle, bone, function
- ✓ Balance exercises for older adults (falls prevention)
- ✓ Progressive overload — must increase challenge to improve
- ✓ Exercise supports weight loss but diet creates deficit
- ✓ Any movement is better than none — start small
Key Consultation Phrases
- 💬 "You don't need a perfect diet. You need one you can repeat on ordinary days."
- 💬 "Use food to change the number on the scales, and use exercise to change everything else."
- 💬 "The best exercise is the one you'll actually do consistently."
- 💬 "Supplements should fill a gap, not compensate for a chaotic diet."
- 💬 "If it feels easy, it's maintenance. If you want to get stronger, you need to challenge yourself."
- 💬 "People are more likely to change when they talk themselves into it, not when you lecture them."
When to Refer
- 🏥 Dietitian: Complex dietary needs, eating disorders, IBS (low FODMAP), malnutrition
- 🏥 Physiotherapist: Chronic pain, injury, falls risk, mobility issues
- 🏥 Specialist: Suspected eating disorder, severe obesity (BMI >40), bariatric surgery consideration
- 🏥 Exercise referral: Chronic conditions needing supervised exercise support
Resources
- 📱 NHS Couch to 5K: Free running app for beginners
- 📱 NHS Better Health: Physical activity and nutrition advice
- 🏃 parkrun: Free, weekly 5km runs/walks
- 🚶 Walking for Health: Free walking groups
- 📚 NICE CKS: Obesity, physical activity, nutrition