PLT Health

PLT Health Evidence-based coaching for health, metabolism, and long-term results We believe in food freedom and enjoying a balanced approach to nutrition.

PLT Nutrition provides nutrition coaching for all ages, for all walks of life and all backgrounds. We don't believe in the excessive tracking approach other companies use but instead a relaxed fluid approach. We don't ask our clients to track everything or to track to a single number, we use calorie ranges to allow our clients to find their daily hunger balance. We are a global company in over 37

countries with a staff of over 30 coaches in USA, Europe, the UK and South Africa. Our community is like no other, its free from shame, free from restrictive or excessive beliefs, its supportive and diverse. Please join us as the community is FREE.

“The Woman Who Thought Menopause Broke Her Metabolism.”We hear this all the time.A woman comes to us frustrated because ...
06/07/2026

“The Woman Who Thought Menopause Broke Her Metabolism.”

We hear this all the time.

A woman comes to us frustrated because the scale won’t move, her energy isn’t what it used to be, and nothing seems to be working the way it once did.

She assumes the answer is simply menopause.

And sometimes menopause is part of the picture.

But we never assume. Rather, we assess.

Before we make recommendations, we take a deep dive into what’s really happening.

With advanced labs, and a review, during the initial health audit, of the many factors that come into play such as health history, medications, sleep, stress, activity levels, nutrition habits, weight history, lifestyle demands, and the daily realities of life in midlife.

Because what appears to be a “metabolism problem” is often something else entirely.

We’ve uncovered elevated inflammation markers.

Poor sleep that was driving hunger and cravings.

Protein intake that was far lower than expected.

Calorie intake that was far higher than expected.

Low daily movement despite regular workouts.

Various health markers that needed attention.

And yes, sometimes we’ve identified hormonal issues that deserved further investigation and support.

The point is that guessing isn’t a strategy.

The women who make the greatest progress are often the women who stop chasing theories and start looking at data.

That’s why our process begins with a comprehensive health assessment.

Because the right solution depends on understanding the real problem.

Sometimes menopause is a factor, but menopause is generally not the only factor.

And until you know what you’re actually dealing with, it’s impossible to know what needs to change.

At PLT Health, we believe better decisions start with better information.

You think it’s ‘just menopause’. We help you find out what’s really going on.

The best time to start was years ago.The second-best time is today.One thing I’ve noticed about women in midlife is how ...
06/06/2026

The best time to start was years ago.

The second-best time is today.

One thing I’ve noticed about women in midlife is how often we put ourselves on hold.

We’ll start when work slows down.
When menopause settles down.
When the kids need us less.
After vacation.
After the holidays.
Next month.
Monday.

And somehow the months become years.

There will probably never be a perfect time.

Life will always be busy.
There will always be obligations.
There will always be reasons to wait.

The women who ultimately change their health, fitness, and lives aren’t the ones who find the perfect moment.

They’re the ones who decide to start anyway. In the midst of chaotic schedules, during their busy seasons, they just start.

One walk.

One workout.

One healthier meal.

One decision to drink less.

One decision to ask for help.

One decision to finally stop putting themselves last.

Most meaningful change starts long before you can see the result.

And then one day you look around and realize you’re living a life that once felt very far away.

Don’t worry about where you’ll be a year from now.

Just focus on the next choice.

The future is built one decision at a time.

“I thought success would be about the number on the scale.Instead, the biggest change has been learning a different rela...
06/05/2026

“I thought success would be about the number on the scale.

Instead, the biggest change has been learning a different relationship with food and with my body.

I now have a body that’s stronger, healthier, and better cared for than it was three months ago.

And that’s progress.

At almost 58 and postmenopausal, I’m losing weight, feeling good, learning new things, and proving to myself that it’s never too late to make a change.

Keep showing up.
Keep eating good food.
Keep listening to your body.
Keep moving forward.

The scale tells part of the story. How you feel tells the rest.”

This is obviously a joke.For over 5yrs PLT has recommended only 1 protein supplement a day. Protein is important and mos...
06/04/2026

This is obviously a joke.

For over 5yrs PLT has recommended only 1 protein supplement a day.

Protein is important and most people would benefit from eating more of it.

But somewhere along the way, protein powder stopped being a supplement and started becoming a food group.

Whey protein prices have climbed significantly over the past year while the fitness industry continues to find new ways to add protein to things that never needed it in the first place.

The funny part?

Most people can hit their protein targets with a foundation of lean meats, fish, tofu, seitan, eggs, dairy, Greek yogurt and perhaps a single protein supplement each day.

Sometimes the boring advice ages the best.

Maybe food was the supplement all along.

Everyone loves to blame cardio for stubborn body fat; but show me one person who gained fat simply because they went for...
06/03/2026

Everyone loves to blame cardio for stubborn body fat; but show me one person who gained fat simply because they went for too many runs.

You’re not gaining fat because of cardio.
Or gluten.

Or fruit.
Or carbs after 7pm.

And despite what social media says…

Here’s a photo of all the people gaining body fat from “doing too much cardio.”

The room is empty.

Because cardio itself is not making people fat.

In reality, body fat is primarily driven by long term energy balance.

Yes, hormones matter.

Yes, menopause can make fat loss feel harder.

Yes, poor sleep and stress can affect hunger, cravings, movement and energy levels.

But none of those things suddenly make cardio “bad” for fat loss.

Cardio improves fitness, heart health, work capacity and total calorie expenditure. For many people, it also improves routine, mood and consistency.

If someone is doing lots of cardio and not losing fat, it usually means overall intake is still exceeding overall expenditure.
Not that cardio “broke” their metabolism.

The fitness industry has become obsessed with convincing people that normal things are secretly harmful.

Weights are good.
Walking is good.
Cardio is good.
Protein is good.
Fruit and vegetables are good.

Most people do not need more fear around food and exercise.

They need more consistency around the basics.

“Menopause needs more than just macros”Tracking macros may have worked before, but menopause changes the game.During men...
06/03/2026

“Menopause needs more than just macros”Tracking macros may have worked before, but menopause changes the game.

During menopause, your body becomes more sensitive to the quality of the food you eat, not just the calories and macros on a tracker.

Research shows that different foods can influence energy expenditure, appetite regulation, insulin sensitivity, inflammation, gut health and even menopausal symptoms. Two diets can contain the same calories and macros, but produce very different outcomes in how you feel, function and recover.

This is why many women find that “if it fits my macros” stops working the same way it once did.

Highly processed foods, excess alcohol and low fiber diets can worsen hunger, blood sugar control, bloating, cholesterol levels and energy levels. On the other hand, improving food quality by increasing fiber, protein, whole foods and nutrient density can help support:
• Improved insulin sensitivity
• Better gut health
• Lower inflammation
• More stable energy
• Reduced cravings
• Improved vasomotor symptoms like hot flushes

That does not mean you can never enjoy a burger, dessert or a night out.

It means that in menopause, health is built more from what you consistently give your body each day than simply “hitting your macros.”

Macros matter.
But food quality, fiber, recovery, movement and lifestyle matter too.

06/01/2026

GLPs are powerful tools and for many people they can be genuinely life changing.

But after coaching more than 27,000 people over the years, one thing has become very clear:

Not everybody has a healthy relationship with food, dieting, exercise or body image.

That matters.

Because appetite suppression without proper oversight, support and behavioural awareness can become problematic very quickly in the wrong context.

This is a conversation the industry needs to have more openly.

Scroll through IG and you’ll often see very fit women, very popular women, telling other women they shouldn’t focus on w...
06/01/2026

Scroll through IG and you’ll often see very fit women, very popular women, telling other women they shouldn’t focus on weight loss.

That they should focus ONLY on building muscle.

While I understand the intent, I think it misses an important distinction.

For a woman who is already active, relatively healthy, and looking to optimize body composition, building muscle may be exactly where her main focus should be.

But that advice is less helpful for someone carrying an extra 30, 50, or 100 pounds.

Because excess body fat is not neutral when it comes to health.

It impacts:
• blood sugar regulation
• insulin sensitivity
• blood pressure
• inflammation
• joint health
• mobility
• sleep quality
• cardiovascular risk

Wanting to lose weight when you are overweight is not vain, diet culture, or something to feel guilty about.

In fact, it can be one of the most important health decisions a person makes.

This isn’t about getting smaller.
This isn’t about shrinking oneself.
It’s about getting healthier.

The mistake is treating this as an either/or conversation. In reality, the best approach for many women is both:

• lose body fat
• preserve muscle
• build strength
• improve fitness, health markers, and quality of life

These goals are not competing with each other, they work together.

At PLT, we don’t view weight loss as the goal. We view improved health as the goal.

And for many women carrying excess body fat, achieving a healthier weight is an important part of that process.

Muscle matters, strength matters. But so does reducing excess body fat and in many cases that’s where the priority should lie because health is always the priority.

Most people know their cholesterol.Far fewer know their ApoB.Or Lipoprotein(a).Or hs-CRP.The problem is many important h...
05/31/2026

Most people know their cholesterol.

Far fewer know their ApoB.
Or Lipoprotein(a).
Or hs-CRP.

The problem is many important health markers are not routinely included in standard bloodwork.

That does not mean they are unimportant.

We run 32 deep health markers as part of our advanced labs with Platinum Health clients because health is rarely explained by one number alone.

Markers like ApoB, hs-CRP, Homocysteine, Ferritin and SHBG may provide additional insight into cardiovascular risk, inflammation, iron status and hormone health.

I get it.You’re probably tired at this stage.Tired of influencers telling you there’s another thing you have to do.Tired...
05/30/2026

I get it.

You’re probably tired at this stage.

Tired of influencers telling you there’s another thing you have to do.

Tired of trying to stay consistent.

Tired of feeling like no matter how hard you try, nothing really changes.

So when some “research peptide” your friend’s friend is selling promises an easier solution… of course it sounds tempting.

But if these things were the answer, they wouldn’t still be labelled “research only.”

The truth is there really aren’t many shortcuts to fat loss outside of GLP-1 medications.

And even then?

GLP-1s still require the PLT Foundations:

* nutrition
* strength training
* fiber
* habits
* consistency
* behaviour change

At we combine the PLT Foundations with medical weight loss support to focus on long-term health — not just short-term fat loss.

Save this if you need the reminder.

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