In the News: Weekend weight gain?

December 1st, 2008

If you are finding it hard to lose weight; your weekends may be to blame, according to recent research from Washington University School of Medicine. In a year long study they found that people on strict diet and exercise programmes were more likely to let things go on a Saturday and Sunday – with Saturday being the most calorie high day. So if you are struggling to lose weight take a good look at your calorie intake over the weekend.

In the News: Child asthma link to ‘stressed out’ mothers

December 1st, 2008

Babies born to mothers who were anxious or stressed during their pregnancy are more at risk of developing asthma research from Bristol University has shown. Close to 6000 families were monitored for eight years and anxiety levels assessed with questionnaires completed at 18 and 32 weeks of pregnancy. The children were assessed for asthma at around age seven. Overall the risk of developing asthma was a staggering 65 per cent higher in women who were stressed compared to those who were not. It is thought that the immune system of developing babies could be influenced by maternal stress, probably through the stress hormone, cortisol.

 

And according to a study released from Kaohsiung Medical University in Taiwan perhaps the best way for mothers to distress and relax is to listen to classical music and the sounds of nature. The study showed that listening to music provided a simple, cost effective and non invasive way of reducing stress, anxiety and depression in pregnancy.

In the News: Five steps to a longer life

December 1st, 2008

A new study from Harvard School of Public Health and Brigham and Women’s Hospital has found that women can dramatically reduce their chances of dying earlier by adopting simple diet lifestyle rules.

 

The key to a healthier and longer life is to eat healthily, exercise regularly, stop smoking and manage your weight.  The study shows that the more of these habits a woman adopts the lower her risk of diseases such as cancer and heart disease. Breaking each of these rules can increase the risk of cancer three fold; the risk of heart disease eight fold and the risk of dying young from any cause four fold. The research also indicated that more than half of women who die young could have lived longer if they took better care of their health.

 

Lifestyle studies in the past were often based on men but this one, published in the British Medical Journal, looked at the diet and lifestyle of 80,000 women aged between 34 and 59, who were healthy at the start of the research. Over the next 25 years around 9,000 women died – about 4,500 from cancer and 1,790 from heart disease. The study showed that being overweight increased the risk of death by 18 percent and being obese by 67 percent. Smoking up to 14 cigarettes a day increased the risk of death by 94 percent and smoking more than this had more than a two fold increase. Having one alcohol drink a day decreased the risk but more than this saw it increase.

 

Eating five portions of fruit and vegetable a day, one serving of nuts and cereal a day – and red meat less than twice a month – cut the risk of early death by 35 per cent. Women who exercised for up to two hours a week reduced the risk of death by 16 percent but this increased to 23 per cent if they exercised up to 3.5 hours a week.

 

This research proves without a doubt that simple diet and lifestyle changes can have a massive impact on reducing the risk of dying early.