Skip to content
The Diary of a CEOThe Diary of a CEO

The Heart Surgeon: Cardio Is A Waste Of Time For Weight Loss! Philip Ovadia | E240

Dr Philip Ovadia is an American heart surgeon, founder of Ovadia Heart Health and the author of the new book, “Stay Off My Operating Table”. Topics: 0:00 Intro 02:02 what mission are you on? 09:30 The healthcare industry is lying! 13:09 Your hardest day as a heart surgeon 23:15 The scary truth about heart disease 32:09 How do I know if I have a healthy heart 35:28 Lots of people are skinny fat 37:28 The simple diet you need for perfect health 42:48 The vegan diet, how good is it really? 44:53 The Truth about supplements 48:46 Why cardio exercise isn’t the best method for weight-loss 56:16 Bad sleep could be a sign of an unhealthy heart… 01:00:04 These are the 12 deadliest food lies 01:06:16 Understanding all this but still eating what you want 01:09:28 Why aren’t people taking on this information and staying unhealthy? 01:13:36 Our conversation cards 01:21:16 The last guests question You can purchase, ‘Stay Off My Operating Table’, here: https://bit.ly/3mGtdVd Philip: Instagram: https://bit.ly/3MYTTeu Twitter: https://bit.ly/3ovMIjW Join this channel to get access to perks: https://bit.ly/3Dpmgx5 Follow:  Instagram: http://bit.ly/3nIkGAZ Twitter: http://bit.ly/3ztHuHm Linkedin: https://bit.ly/41Fl95Q Telegram: http://bit.ly/3nJYxST Sponsors:  Huel: https://g2ul0.app.link/G4RjcdKNKsb Bluejeans: https://bit.ly/3nutavx

Dr Philip OvadiaguestSteven Bartletthost
Apr 19, 20231h 24mWatch on YouTube ↗

At a glance

WHAT IT’S REALLY ABOUT

Heart Surgeon Reveals Why Cardio Fails And Food Is Killing Us

  1. Heart surgeon Dr. Philip Ovadia explains why most heart disease is preventable and argues that poor metabolic health, driven largely by processed food and sugar, is the true root cause. He shares his own transformation from morbidly obese, pre-diabetic surgeon to metabolically healthy doctor after redefining health and diet around whole, unprocessed foods.
  2. Ovadia contends that the medical system over-relies on pharmaceuticals and procedures while neglecting upstream lifestyle drivers, and that genetics are vastly overstated as an explanation for chronic disease. He outlines simple markers of metabolic health and insists that 88% of adults currently fail them, including many people who appear slim.
  3. He challenges common beliefs about weight loss, saying chronic cardio is ineffective for fat loss and that building and maintaining muscle, improving sleep, and reducing meal frequency are far more impactful strategies. Throughout, he warns that if metabolic health trends don’t improve within the next 50 years, society will struggle to sustain itself.

IDEAS WORTH REMEMBERING

5 ideas

Metabolic health is the foundation of long-term health—and 88% of adults are failing it.

Ovadia defines metabolic health as the body properly using food for energy, repair, and limited storage. It’s measured by five markers: waist circumference, blood pressure, fasting blood glucose, HDL cholesterol, and triglycerides. Data from 2016 show that 88% of U.S. adults fail to meet all five criteria; even among people who are not overweight, about 50% are metabolically unhealthy. Focusing on these markers, not just weight or appearance, is crucial.

Genetics play a minor role; diet and environment drive the chronic disease epidemic.

Human genetics haven’t changed meaningfully in 100–150 years, but obesity, diabetes, and heart disease have exploded in that time. Heart disease was rare in the early 1900s and surged around the 1950s, coinciding with the rise of processed foods and increased sugar consumption. Ovadia argues this timeline makes it clear that lifestyle—especially what and how we eat—is the primary driver, not inherited destiny.

Processed food and sugar are central culprits in heart disease and metabolic breakdown.

Historically, scientists debated whether cholesterol or sugar was the main cause of heart disease. The cholesterol theory won institutional backing, leading to low-fat guidelines and cholesterol-lowering drugs, yet heart disease rates have not declined accordingly. Ovadia highlights evidence that sugar damages blood vessel linings and that cholesterol may be part of the repair process rather than the root cause. Processed foods deliver cheap calories but poor nutrients, making people both overfed and undernourished, and chronically hungry.

Cardio is unreliable for fat loss; building muscle is far more powerful.

Research shows steady-state cardio (jogging, long runs, typical gym cardio) doesn’t reliably produce fat loss. After cardio, people often feel hungrier and eat more, offsetting calories burned. The body also compensates by burning fewer calories during the rest of the day. In contrast, resistance training builds muscle, which is metabolically active tissue that increases baseline calorie burn 24/7 and is strongly linked to better longevity and function with age. Ovadia recommends prioritizing strength training and overall daily movement over “chronic cardio” for weight management.

Whole, real food—especially animal products—is the common denominator of successful diets.

Across carnivore, keto, Mediterranean, paleo, and even well-constructed vegan diets, the consistent success factor is eliminating processed food and focusing on whole foods. Ovadia’s simple rule: “Eat the things that grow in the ground and the things that eat the things that grow in the ground.” He argues humans are particularly well-adapted to animal foods, that animal protein is highly nutrient-dense, and that optimal diets should not require supplementation—something long-term vegans typically need.

WORDS WORTH SAVING

5 quotes

The vast majority of the surgeries that I do are preventable, shouldn’t need to be done in the first place.

Dr. Philip Ovadia

Cardio is not effective for weight loss. Science is pretty clear on that.

Dr. Philip Ovadia

Human genetics don’t change that quickly, yet in the past 100 years we’ve seen this explosion of chronic disease.

Dr. Philip Ovadia

Processed food is addictive. Sugar is more addictive than heroin.

Dr. Philip Ovadia

If we don’t change the course in the next 50 years, we’re not gonna have a society left.

Dr. Philip Ovadia

Metabolic health: definition, markers, and prevalence of dysfunctionDiet and nutrition: whole food vs processed food, sugar, animal vs plant foodsHeart disease: causes, history, and preventabilityExercise: cardio vs resistance training for fat loss and longevitySleep, fasting, and lifestyle habits in metabolic healthFailures and incentives of modern healthcare and food industriesAddiction, behavior change, and psychological barriers to better health

High quality AI-generated summary created from speaker-labeled transcript.

Get more out of YouTube videos.

High quality summaries for YouTube videos. Accurate transcripts to search & find moments. Powered by ChatGPT & Claude AI.

Add to Chrome