Sunday, December 21, 2025
ADVT 
Health

It Only Takes 30 Minutes To Feel Stronger, Thinner

Darpan News Desk IANS, 16 Jun, 2017 11:43 PM
    You may want to hit the gym as according to a recent study, just one 30-minute bout of exercise makes women feel stronger and thinner.
     
    The UBC study also found that the positive effect lasts well beyond the activity itself, which may be good news for women concerned about their body image.
     
    "Women, in general, have a tendency to feel negatively about their bodies," said senior author Kathleen Martin Ginis. "This is a concern because poor body image can have harmful implications for a woman's psychological and physical health including increased risk for low self-esteem, depression and for eating disorders. This study indicates exercise can have an immediate positive effect."
     
    Martin Ginis, along with Lauren Salci, compared the body image and physical perceptions of women who completed 30 minutes of moderate aerobic exercise with those who sat and read. Women in the exercise group had significant improvements in their body image compared to those who didn't exercise.
     
     
    This positive effect lasted at least 20 minutes post-exercise. The research team further established that this effect was not due to a change in the women's mood, rather it was linked to perceiving themselves as stronger and thinner.
     
    "We all have those days when we don't feel great about our bodies," noted Martin Ginis. "This study and our previous research shows one way to feel better, is to get going and exercise. The effects can be immediate."
     
    Martin Ginis sees this study as a gateway to developing maximally effective body image-enhancing exercise interventions.
     
    "We think that the feelings of strength and empowerment women achieve post exercise, stimulate an improved internal dialogue," added Martin Ginis. "This in turn should generate positive thoughts and feelings about their bodies which may replace the all too common negative ones."
     
     
    The study appears in the journal Psychology of Sport and Exercise.

    MORE Health ARTICLES

    Diabetes, heart disease may share deep roots

    Diabetes, heart disease may share deep roots
    Type 2 diabetes and cardio-vascular disease often occur together and scientists have now discovered that the two diseases may be related at the level of genes...

    Diabetes, heart disease may share deep roots

    Ditch Ready-to-eat Meals To Avoid High Calories

    Ditch Ready-to-eat Meals To Avoid High Calories
    Do you want to help trim yours and your family’s waistlines? One can save over a month’s worth of calories every year by ditching 'ready meals' and instead taking a Do it Yourself (DIY) approach to making common foods.

    Ditch Ready-to-eat Meals To Avoid High Calories

    Second-hand Smoke Leads To Obesity

    Second-hand Smoke Leads To Obesity
    Debunking a long-held popular belief that smoking cigarettes helps keep one slim, researchers have now found that even second hand exposure to cigarette smoke can cause weight gain.

    Second-hand Smoke Leads To Obesity

    Copper could help prevent Ebola spread

    Copper could help prevent Ebola spread
    Replacing frequently-touched surfaces, such as door handles, taps and light switches, with solid copper or copper alloy equivalents could be an...

    Copper could help prevent Ebola spread

    Inhaled Ebola vaccine could offer long-term protection

    Inhaled Ebola vaccine could offer long-term protection
    A single dose of a breathable, respiratory vaccine could provide long-term protection against the deadly Ebola virus, new research shows....

    Inhaled Ebola vaccine could offer long-term protection

    Sugar-rich fat maintains supply of brain stem cells

    Sugar-rich fat maintains supply of brain stem cells
    Fat and sugar are considered to be the culprits when it comes to obesity and related health complications but if researchers are to be believed...

    Sugar-rich fat maintains supply of brain stem cells