Want to meet Hala and get a taste of the incredible celebrity health and beauty secrets? Nutrition Rocks has an upcoming day retreat at the Sanctum Soho Hotel, where you'll get the chance the meet celebrity nutritionist and registered dietitian Hala El-Shafie
Hala El-Shafie is a registered dietitian and consultant nutritionist with over 15 year's experience in the NHS, private & corporate sectors. In 2010 Hala launched a lifestyle website called Nutrition-Rocks. Nutrition-Rocks combines expert information & advice to help people get on the path to a healthy lifestyle.
Hala has a unique understanding of the emotional and psychological issues often associated with food, and has created a successful holistic client-centered approach that has brought her an extensive and loyal following, including a number of high-profile and celebrity clients.
"-The number of fad diets and omissions of whole food groups is now reaching epidemic proportions to remove whole food groups without fully understanding how the body works or considering your bodies needs and what you need to put back into your body is simply the quickest way to acquire nutrition deficiencies which lead to ill health. Nutrition and eating well means to ensure a variety and balance of nutrients for your bodies needs - your relationship with food and how we eat is equally as important as WHY we eat and remember a healthy BMI is not necessarily an indicator of health. Malnutrition can affect anyone including the overweight and obese. Nourishing your body is what's key and having a healthy relationship with YOU.-"
Psychology of eating expert Hala El-Shafie BSc Hons Founder of Nutrition Rocks.
"How to lose weight well" returns for another season. Dr Xand van Tulleken and dietician Hala El-Shafie help six dieters attempt the most hyped and written-about diets on the market today, meanwhile, cook Stacie Stewart helps the volunteers turn their diets into delicious dishes.
Going cold turkey from sugar can be seriously tough and Sugar Free Farm sets out to put this to the test.
Food, with all its complexities, can be one of the most emotionally charged, indulgent and most secretive of all our relationships.
We spoke to How to Lose Weight Well’s Hala El-Shafie to get some concrete answers…
Emotional eating is a big problem for many women - but one dietician believes that identifying the triggers that make us reach for the cake tin will result in a healthier relationship with food.
With detoxes and diets in full flow, a campaign group has been set up to reduce the amount of sugar added to food and soft drinks.
Action on Sugar aims to tackle obesity and diabetes in the UK by helping people to avoid "hidden sugars" and getting manufacturers to reduce the ingredient over time.
By now unless you’ve been hiding under a rock most of us know eating too much sugar isn’t good for us and that overdoing the sweet stuff has been linked to obesity, Type 2 diabetes, metabolic disease, fatty liver and other chronic health conditions.
"My Goal as a nutritionist has always been to encourage women to eat better for their health & develop a more positive body image."
"My Goal as a nutritionist has always been to encourage women to eat better for their health & develop a more positive body image."