Not exact matches
White and his colleagues conducted a secondary analysis of the Action for Health in Diabetes (
Look AHEAD) study, a randomized intervention of trial
adults ages 45 to 76 years who were
obese and had Type 2 diabetes mellitus that started in 2001.
For example, a brand new UK study published in the American Journal of Clinical Nutrition
looked at
obese adults who ate the a.m. meal and those who skipped it, and found no differences between the two groups in weight change, or most health outcomes.
In a large analysis of the link between sleep and fat loss, researchers
looked at 36 studies, including 635,000 people around the world, and found that
adults who didn't get enough sleep were 50 percent more likely to be
obese, and children who didn't get enough sleep were 90 percent more likely to be
obese, compared with those who got more sleep.
It's suited for
obese IR
adults (most overweight /
obese people are insulin resistant) who are
looking to reduce body fat.