The study is published in the July issue of the journal Obesity
published by The Obesity Society (TOS).
Not exact matches
Public Health England have
published a report detailing how they hope to achieve a 20 % reduction in sugar
by 2020 in order to combat childhood
obesity.
Last week, the Dallas Morning News
published an article
by columnist Nancy Churnin blaming high school sports and the increasingly competitive and elite sports at earlier ages for the
obesity epidemic.
Co-Authored
by Brian & Bonnie Hershey The Chicago Tribune recently
published the results of a study that sought to identify potential risk factors contributing to childhood
obesity.
In a fascinating new study
published in the journal
Obesity, researchers found that cutting sugar in children's diets for just ten days caused marked improvements in their metabolic health - despite the fact that the sugar was replaced
by other... [Continue reading]
In support of this idea, a new article
published in the Guardian has found that bottle fed babies may be at greater risk for adult
obesity and
by extension, heart disease.
Research
published yesterday
by the Medical Research Council, Human Nutrition Research Centre and the Department of Health found parents fail to respond to the warning signs of childhood
obesity.
Previous research
published by Fenton in 2009 identified the connection between
obesity and colon cancer through examining tissue hormones.
Obesity and a bigger waist size in older women are associated with a higher risk of death, major chronic disease and mobility disability before the age of 85, according to a study
published by JAMA Internal Medicine, a JAMA Network publication.
The findings,
published today in the journal Cell, give new insights into how the brain regulates body fat and may lead to more effective ways to lose weight and prevent
obesity by promoting the conversion of white fat to brown fat.
Similarly, a study
published in 2003
by Harvard researchers in the Journal of the American Medical Association (JAMA) found that each 2 - hour increment of daily television watching raised people's risk of
obesity by about 25 percent and their risk of diabetes
by 15 percent.
An expectant mother's exposure to the endocrine - disrupting chemical bisphenol A (BPA) can raise her offspring's risk of
obesity by reducing sensitivity to a hormone responsible for controlling appetite, according to a mouse study
published in the Endocrine Society's journal Endocrinology.
In a separate editorial
published in the May issue of
Obesity, Dr. Puhl, joined by Ted Kyle, RPh, TOS advocacy advisor, encourage the use of people - first language for obesity, or putting people before their d
Obesity, Dr. Puhl, joined
by Ted Kyle, RPh, TOS advocacy advisor, encourage the use of people - first language for
obesity, or putting people before their d
obesity, or putting people before their disease.
These secondary analyses conducted
by Unick and colleagues
published in the July issue of
Obesity, the scientific journal of The
Obesity Society examined the association between initial weight loss (first two months of treatment) and long - term weight loss (eight years after initial treatment).
Eating fish more than three times a week during pregnancy was associated with mothers giving birth to babies at increased risk of rapid growth in infancy and of childhood
obesity, according to an article
published online
by JAMA Pediatrics.
This follows a study in the International Journal of
Obesity,
published by Springer Nature, which shows that the increasingly popular fibre - rich «New Nordic Diet» might not work for everyone.
The idea that it might be possible to be overweight or obese but not at increased risk of heart disease, otherwise known as the «
obesity paradox,» has been challenged
by a study of nearly 300,000 people
published in in the European Heart Journal today (Friday).
The prospective study, conducted
by doctors at Wake Forest Baptist Medical Center, is
published in the current online issue of the International Journal of
Obesity.
The authors revised the paper, adding some analysis and explanation of their methodological approach, and said the new version was accepted
by peer reviewers before being
published in Pediatric
Obesity.
The findings are contained in a study entitled «Multiparity Leads to
Obesity and Inflammation in Mothers and
Obesity in Male Offspring,» and appear in the American Journal of Physiology — Endocrinology and Metabolism,
published by the American Physiological Society.
The findings,
published online June 24 in Scientific Reports
by Georgetown Lombardi Comprehensive Cancer Center researchers, come from one of the first animal studies to examine the impact of paternal
obesity on future generations» cancer risk.
* «Artificially sweetened beverages and the response to the global
obesity crisis»
by Maria Carolina Borges et al.
published in PLOS Medicine at 19:00 UK time on Tuesday 3 January 2017.
A study undertaken
by researchers from Birzeit University in Palestine,
published in the peer - reviewed
Obesity Research and Clinical Practice Journal, put carbonation under the microscope for a period of six months.
And a study in humans
published in the journal
Obesity earlier this year found that men who took Zyprexa for just two weeks increased their food intake
by 18 %, on average.
A study
published in the Journal of
Obesity on April 6, 2012 found that TT - style workouts cut dangerous belly fat
by 17 % in just 60 minutes per week of exercise.
If the calculations that Dutch scientists made are correct, you burn more than 5 grams of fat extra for every cup of green tea you drink, according to a meta - analysis
published by Rick Hursel in
Obesity Reviews.
In a recent study
published in the Journal of
Obesity, researchers examined the effects of 25 - pound weight losses
by 94 women.
Last week there was some excitement with the report
published in the Journal of the American Medical Association that
obesity rates for the age group 2 - 5 years had dropped
by 43 %.
In a 2010 study
published in the American Journal of Clinical Nutrition, the researchers found that when you replace saturated fat with a higher carbohydrate intake, you increase insulin resistance and
obesity, and increase your chances of getting heart disease
by increasing triglycerides and small LDL particles, and reducing beneficial HDL cholesterol.
Breezing has been featured in a new study
published by the Global Journal of
Obesity, Diabetes and Metabolic Syndrome.
Breezing's study has just been
published by the Global Journal of
Obesity, Diabetes and Metabolic Syndrome.
A study
published in «The Journal of Nutritional Biochemistry» in December 2012 found that the compound indole -3-carbinol in cruciferous vegetables helped prevent
obesity in mice fed a high - fat diet
by decreasing inflammation and the formation of fat cells and increasing the number of calories burned.
One meta - analysis of nearly 700
published studies showed that both adults and children who are short sleepers have an increased risk of
obesity.1 In a different study, 12 men were allowed a full night of sleep (8 hours) followed
by a partial night of sleep (4 hours); after the latter, the men were hungrier upon waking up and ate more during the day (22 %).2 Acute partial sleep leads to increased serum levels of ghrelin (a hunger hormone) and decreased levels of leptin (a satiety hormone).
In 2001 a study
by Krotkiewski was
published in the International Journal of
Obesity & Related Metabolic Disorders (21).
A meta - analysis of 696 studies
published in 2008 showed that short sleep duration increased the risk of
obesity by 55 % in adults and 89 % in children.
Drs. Rajita Sinha and Ania Jastreboff from Yale University School of Medicine have extensively reviewed the
published research on this topic in «Stress as a common risk factor for
obesity and addiction» in the journal Biological Psychiatry (May 2013), and the topic is also researched
by other experts in this field.
The report Adoption of
obesity prevention policies and practices
by Australian primary schools: 2006 to 2013,
published in 2015, looked at the extent to which schools have adopted
obesity prevention policies and practices.
According to a report
by the Massachusetts Department of Public Health
published in 2010, Lawrence needs help in this area; the city has the highest rate of
obesity in Massachusetts.
Research
published by the Children's Food Trust in 2012 suggests that in schools with greater a higher proportion of paid - for lunches the incidence of
obesity is significantly lower, and that these lunches typically contain fewer calories than packed lunches (395 kcal as opposed to 450 on average).
Steve Easterbrook, the CEO of McDonald's UK, is blaming video games for childhood
obesity in a piece
published by The Times.
Her publications And Another Thing: Nonanthropocentrism and Art, coedited with Emmy Mikelson, and Bigger than You: Big Data and
Obesity were
published by punctum books the same year.
A recent study conducted
by UCLA researchers and
published in the International Journal of
Obesity showed that using the body mass index misclassifies cardiometabolic health.
A just
published study
by researchers at Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center finds that
obesity, alcohol use and smoking all significantly increase the risk of second breast cancer among breast cancer survivors.
New Australian evidence suggests that having GPs weigh their patients at each visit could play a role in reducing
obesity levels, while efforts to tackle the social determinants of
obesity are underway in South Australia, according to this report
by Lareen Newman and Michele Herriot,
published at both The Conversation and Croakey.
Her latest book, Mindful Eating: Rediscovering a Healthy and Joyful Relationship with Food (Shambhala
Publishing, 2009), was inspired
by the current epidemic of
obesity in America.