Sunday, May 31, 2026
ADVT 
Health

Don't Skip Breakfast If You Want To Remain Active

Darpan News Desk IANS, 13 Feb, 2016 12:33 PM
  • Don't Skip Breakfast If You Want To Remain Active
Eating breakfast may not only make people, especially obese, lose weight but can also make them more physically active and reduce food intake later in the day, reveals a study.
 
According to the team, increasing activity can improve health in sedentary people making them more active by controlling their blood sugar levels.
 
"Despite many people offering opinions about whether or not you should eat breakfast, to date, there has been a lack of rigorous scientific evidence showing how, or whether, breakfast might cause changes in our health,” said lead researcher James Betts from the University of Bath in Britain.
 
The results highlight some of these impacts, but "how important" breakfast is still really depends on the individual and their own personal goals, Betts added.
 
The team wanted to study the possible links between breakfast, body weight and health.
 
In the study, published in the American Journal of Clinical Nutrition, researchers split obese individuals aged 21-60 into two groups "fasting" and "breakfasting" -- measuring several outcomes during a six-week period.
 
The "breakfasting" group was asked to eat at least 700 calories by 11 a.m., which the first half of the group consumed within at least two hours of waking up. The fasting group was allowed only water until noon.
 
"For example, if weight loss is the key, there is little to suggest that just having breakfast or skipping it will matter. However, based on other markers of a healthy lifestyle like being more active or controlling blood sugar levels, then there is evidence that breakfast may help," Betts noted.
 
It is important to bear in mind that not everybody responds in the same way to breakfast and that not all breakfasts are equal. 
 
"The effects of a sugary cereal compared to a high-protein breakfast are likely to be quite different,” said Enhad Chowdhury, another researcher.

MORE Health ARTICLES

How watching movies synchronises viewers' brains

How watching movies synchronises viewers' brains
Do you know that while watching a movie, your brain reacts to it immediately in a way similar to other people's brains? Researchers have succeeded in developing a method fast enough to observe immediate changes in the function of the brain even when watching a movie. 

How watching movies synchronises viewers' brains

Twitter, Facebook driving couples to break relationships!

Twitter, Facebook driving couples to break relationships!
Arguments over social media platforms among romantic partners are damaging relationships, ending in negative outcomes like emotional and physical cheating, breakup and divorce, a significant research reveals.

Twitter, Facebook driving couples to break relationships!

Have green tea to boost working memory

Have green tea to boost working memory
 Have another cup of green tea after reading this, especially if you are in office. Researchers at University of Basel in Switzerland have found that green tea extract enhances the cognitive functions - in particular the working memory.

Have green tea to boost working memory

First Mars settlers to devour grasshoppers?

First Mars settlers to devour grasshoppers?
Even as scientists explore possibilities of human settlement on the red planet, speculations are now on as to what could be the diet of the first human settlers in Mars.

First Mars settlers to devour grasshoppers?

Drinking milk can delay knee problem in women

Drinking milk can delay knee problem in women
Women who frequently consume fat-free or low-fat milk may delay the progression of osteoarthritis (OA) of the knee, research indicates.

Drinking milk can delay knee problem in women

e-cigarettes next big smoking poison, warns study

e-cigarettes next big smoking poison, warns study
The fast spreading e-cigarettes are undoing the anti-smoking efforts of the last three decades, health experts warn. Also, the number of people being poisoned by e-cigarettes in the US has gone up manifold in the last few years, according to official reports.

e-cigarettes next big smoking poison, warns study