Background
Wurtman, Judith Joy was born on August 4, 1939 in Brooklyn. Daughter of Alexander Mordecai and Jeanette Teicher Hirschhorn.
(Do you head for the refrigerator after a grueling day at ...)
Do you head for the refrigerator after a grueling day at work, or pay your bills with a bowl of potato chips by your side? If your answer is yes, you eat your way through stress: you are an "emotional overeater." And if every diet you have ever tried has ended in failure because you lose control of your eating when your emotions fray, here is good news. Contrary to every eating plan you've ever tried or read about, the cure for emotional overeating is not expensive therapy or superhuman will power. It's food. The secret is the neurotransmitter serotonin, a naturally occurring chemical in the brain that makes us feel good. Stress interferes with our serotonin supply and leaves us without enough of this brain chemical to regulate our moods. But we can boost serotonin simply by eating the right kinds of foods. The reason you feel an uncontrollable urge to eat is because your brain is crying out for relief; it is desperately seeking serotonin! And when you eat the right foods, serotonin runs on full and stress vanishes. The Serotonin Solution is the first book to confront and control emotion-driven overeating. Based on ten years of revolutionary research and testing at M.I.T., Judith J. Wurtman's Serotonin Power meal and snack plan tells you how to allocate protein, carbohydrate, and fat dosages to literally increase the power of your brain to control your eating. The result? Restored energy, an end to emotional overeating, and permanent weight loss. You will learn to: * identify your overeating triggers * follow a daily meal and snack plan that makes you feel so good you'll want to do it * avoid foods that exacerbate stress or block the stress-breaker foods from working * combine exercise with stress-breaker foods to feel good and lose weight faster Along with the basic Serotonin Power Diet Plan for daily stress, Wurtman offers food plans tailored for other types of emotional overeating: a premenstrual mood change plan; a winter/summer food plan; a plan for people who have just quit smoking, finished a diet, or are at home with their preschool kids; and a plan for those who work shifts and are awake when their bodies want to be asleep. Finally, there is a plan to be used in conjunction with the serotonin-based medication developed by Judith Wurtman that is now pending FDA approval. The Serotonin Solution is the only diet book based on Wurtman's original discovery of the scientific relationship between overeating and serotonin. It can help you banish emotional overeating forever and take control of your appetite for good.
http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/0449910016/?tag=2022091-20
Wurtman, Judith Joy was born on August 4, 1939 in Brooklyn. Daughter of Alexander Mordecai and Jeanette Teicher Hirschhorn.
Bachelor, Wellesely (Massachusetts) College, 1959; Master of Arts in Biology Education, Harvard University, 1960; Doctor of Philosophy, George Washington University, 1973.
Teacher, Malden School System, 1959-1960;
research assistant, Microbiol. Associations, Bethesda, Maryland., 1962-1967;
exhibit researcher, Boston Museum Science, 1973-1974;
assistant professor, Newton (Massachusetts) College, 1974-1976;
postdoctoral fellow department nutrition, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, 1976-1978;
research scientist department nutrition, department brain and cognitive science, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, since 1987;
program director, Triad Weight Management Center, McLean Hospital, since 1998. Member scientific advisory board NutriSystem, Philadelphia, 1988-1989, Interneuron Pharmaceuticals, Boston, since 1989.
Board directors Walden Labs. Scientific advisor Internutria, Framingham, since 1994.
(Do you head for the refrigerator after a grueling day at ...)
Member of the board overseers Boston Lyric Opera, 1996. Board visitors Hebrew College, since 1996. Member American Institute Nutrition, American Dietitic Association, American Society for Clinical Nutrition, Boston Society Psychiatry and Neurology, Society for Light Treatmentand Biological Rhythms, Sigma Xi (Massachusetts Institute of Technology chapter).
Married Richard JayWurtman. Children: Rachael, David.