Eat Little But Still Can't Lose Weight
May relate to metabolism, muscle mass, hormones, or diet balance.
You may not be lacking effort—you may be stuck on different causes. From body composition and metabolism to eating habits, identify your weight-loss blockers first to plan a better approach.
May relate to metabolism, muscle mass, hormones, or diet balance.
Often from short-term dieting without building sustainable eating habits.
A physician can assess whether diet management or medication support is needed.
Sedentary lifestyle, stress, poor sleep, and muscle loss can all slow weight loss.
We can assess body contouring or device-assisted options.
Physician-guided assessment and lab data support safer weight management.
First Assessment Process
No need to choose a treatment upfront. Your first visit covers your health status, eating habits, and goals—then a physician recommends the right direction.
Height, weight, past weight loss attempts, regain history, and daily routine.
Assess body fat, muscle mass, visceral fat, and basal metabolic rate.
Evaluate links to metabolism, hormones, blood sugar, stress, or medications.
Discuss diet, medication, testing, follow-up, or body contouring based on your profile.
Review costs, follow-up schedule, and ongoing tracking plan.
You may wonder: "How much does a weight loss visit cost?" or "Is it covered by insurance?"
Costs vary by exam and treatment plan. Here is a full breakdown:
From data testing and physician assessment to phased plans—a complete process to help you find safe, sustainable weight management.
Through body composition, blood tests, and related assessments to understand body fat, muscle, metabolism, and health status.
Physicians assess your condition and coordinate with nutritionists to adjust diet and lifestyle as needed.
Based on your profile, goals, and compliance—plan diet, tracking, medication, or treatment support for sustainable weight management.
Not everyone needs the same approach. Naiss evaluates your weight, body fat, eating habits, health, and goals to recommend the right direction.
Those who eat out often, crave snacks, or cycle between undereating and bingeing.
Nutritionist consults, food logging, and calorie/macro adjustments.
Those who eat little but can't lose weight, or have metabolic health concerns.
Blood tests, body composition, glucose monitoring, and metabolic assessment.
Those with appetite control challenges, elevated BMI, or physician-assessed need for support.
Physician evaluates weight-loss medication suitability with regular follow-up.
Those who still want to refine belly, waist, or thigh contours after weight loss.
Assess body contouring or device-assisted options as needed.
From initial consultation and data testing to regular follow-up—a 10-step process to help you find the right approach under professional guidance.
Review weight history, past attempts, eating habits, and health status.
Assess body fat, muscle, visceral fat, metabolism, and health markers.
Identify blockers and determine if further testing or support is needed.
Arrange diet, tracking, medication, or treatment support as needed.
Adjust based on weight, body fat, appetite, habits, and body response.
Review daily eating, dining out habits, and calorie intake for sustainable changes.
Physician determines medication suitability; staff explains usage and precautions.
Supplement nutrients to support metabolism, energy, and your body during weight loss.
Match devices or treatments to body fat, contours, and metabolism for better results.
Physicians, nutritionists, and nursing staff track progress and adjust strategy.
Weight loss clinic isn't only for high BMI. If you regain weight repeatedly, eat little but can't lose, or need safer health tracking—start with an assessment.
Weight, body fat, or waistline already affecting health and quality of life.
Lost weight through dieting but regained it when eating normally.
May relate to metabolism, muscle, hormones, stress, or sleep.
Requires closer physician assessment and health data tracking.
Prone to cravings, bingeing, or snacking after dinner.
Weddings, photoshoots, or events—want a phased management plan.
Through physician assessment, data tracking, and phased plans—they found their own pace. Results vary by individual.
Results vary by individual. Please consult a physician for your specific situation.
With age, work stress, sedentary habits, poor sleep, and muscle loss—what used to work with a few days of eating less no longer does.
Instead of extreme dieting, understand body composition, eating habits, and metabolism to find what really needs to change.
Slower Metabolism After 30
Eating less used to work—now the scale barely moves.
Sedentary & Dining Out
Low activity plus high-fat, high-carb dining out expands the waistline.
Health Markers Turning Red
High BP, fatty liver, and blood sugar issues often link to weight management.
Questions You May Have Before Consulting
If you eat little but can't lose weight, regain repeatedly, have high body fat or waist size, struggle with appetite, or have metabolic health concerns—a weight loss assessment is a good first step.
Physicians assess your weight, body fat, habits, and health to recommend the right direction.
Yes. We assess more than the scale—body fat, muscle, visceral fat, waist, eating habits, and metabolism.
Even without obvious excess weight, stubborn fat or high body fat warrants exploring management options.
We review height, weight, past attempts, eating habits, routine, and health status.
Body composition, blood tests, or physician assessment may follow—then we discuss diet, medication, treatments, or tracking.
Not necessarily. Physicians evaluate BMI, body fat, appetite, metabolic markers, and history.
Some start with diet and lifestyle; others may benefit from medication or additional support.
Effects vary by medication—suitability requires physician evaluation.
We review your health, medications, conditions, and goals—then explain suitability, precautions, and follow-up.
Timeline varies by weight, metabolism, diet compliance, lifestyle, and treatment plan.
We set phased goals focused on safe, sustainable management—not rapid short-term drops.
Regain links to eating habits, lifestyle, stress, sleep, activity, and follow-up.
We focus on diet and habit building—not just short-term dieting that leads to regain.
Costs vary by initial assessment, tests, nutrition consults, medication, or treatments.
After the first assessment, we explain options and cost ranges before proceeding.
Yes. Plans are individualized—not everyone needs additional treatments.
If dining out, macros, calories, or routine are the main issues—we may start with nutrition consults and habit changes.
DIY dieting often focuses only on calories or weight—missing body fat, muscle, metabolism, and health data.
Clinic care starts with physician assessment, body composition, eating habits, and follow-up to find blockers and plan the right approach.
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