DonateYourCalories.com Applies Weight Loss to World Hunger

October 12, 2007 (PRLEAP.COM) Health News
DANBURY, Conn. (Oct. 12, 2007) — How many starving children can a person save by losing unwanted pounds? "More than you'd guess," says Terry Dunkle, CEO of Diet Power, Inc. His company has launched a new website, www.DonateYourCalories.com, that calculates dollars you'll save and children you can feed with the calories you give up while dieting.

Tell this new online computer that you’re a 38-year-old woman on a moderate food budget who wants to drop from 150 to 129 pounds by next July 4, for example. Seconds later, it replies that your diet will lower your grocery bill by $31 a month. Donated to a typical hunger charity using volunteers and surplus food, that's enough to feed two children full-time.

"'Donate Your Calories’ is our way of helping to erase one of today’s greatest ironies,' Dunkle says. "While millions are going to bed hungry every night — including many in our own country — we’re becoming a nation that's too fat for its own good."

Overweight and inactivity have doubled over the past 30 years, and now rank as one of America’s top 10 killers. The Centers for Disease Control estimate deaths at 112,000 a year, mostly from heart disease, cancer, diabetes and stroke. That's four times the number killed in auto accidents.

Meanwhile, the Rand Corporation has pegged the annual medical and social costs at a whopping $950 per U.S. household.

"Donating your calories is a quadruple-win proposition," Dunkle says. "How else can you improve your health, save hungry children, cut your insurance premiums and build international goodwill without spending an extra dime? Remember, this is money you're already wasting by overeating."

Dunkle is inviting hunger charities to link to www.DonateYourCalories.com, which DietPower is operating as a public service. He is also contributing savings from his own weight-loss calories to such organizations.

Diet Power, Inc. produces weight loss- and nutrition-coaching software for the personal computer. Advised by leading experts in nutrition, sports physiology and behavioral science, the company began in 1988 when Dunkle was a Reader’s Digest editor looking for an easier way to count calories. Free, no-obligation trials of its software are available at www.DietPower.com.