📝 Detailed Answer
From the perspective of Traditional Korean Medicine (TKM), diet products and general dieting methods are viewed quite differently. Many patients often turn to TKM clinics after experiencing digestive distress or lack of results from commercial diet products.
Comparison of the two approaches:
| Category | Diet Products/Supplements | General Dieting Methods |
| :--- | :--- | :--- |
| **Approach** | Focused on short-term weight loss | Lifestyle improvement and constitutional change |
| **Mechanism** | Appetite suppression, water excretion, blocking fat absorption |
| **Sustainability** | Temporary; high risk of yo-yo effect upon discontinuation |
| **Risks** | Nutritional imbalance, GI distress, kidney strain |
| **TKM View** | Treats only the surface symptoms (Biao-zheng); fails to address root causes like Spleen Deficiency or Phlegm-Fluid |
| **Examples** | Protein shakes, diet teas, meal replacements |
| **TKM Approach** | Balanced diet, exercise, and metabolic boost via herbal medicine and acupuncture |
In TKM, we often emphasize Spleen Deficiency (脾虛). When the Spleen is weak, the body fails to digest food properly, leading to the accumulation of Phlegm-Fluid (痰飮) and Dampness (濕), which causes weight gain. Diet products rarely address these root causes. Conversely, TKM utilizes Pattern Identification (辨證) to provide personalized prescriptions that strengthen Spleen function, remove Phlegm, and promote the circulation of Qi and Blood, ensuring long-term weight maintenance.
It is difficult to say one is unconditionally superior, as the best choice depends on your constitution, lifestyle, and current health status. However, if you have faced repeated failures in dieting, I recommend first examining signals from your body—such as indigestion, chronic fatigue, or constipation. Without resolving these underlying imbalances, no diet can be sustainable.