Healthy isn?t something you are or aren?t. It?s a hundred little things: eating a banana, walking in the park, putting a bandage on a boo-boo, playing tag, reading up on ways to keep you and your family well and safe. It?s a balance between living well and taking care, and you can start right where you are.
A blog by Christina Elston
Healthy isn't something you are or aren't. It's a hundred little things: eating a banana, walking in the park, putting a bandage on a boo-boo, playing tag, reading up on ways to keep you and your family well and safe. It's a balance between living well and taking care, and you can start right where you are.


To Stay Thin, Toss the TV and Junk Food and Sleep In On Saturday

scaleA pair of studies out this week on keeping those extra pounds at bay offer some standard – and sometimes surprising – advice.

1. Ditch those extra TV sets. Cal Poly San Luis Obispo researchers, reporting in this month’s edition of Annals of Behavioral Medicine, found that people who had lost weight, and kept it off at least 5 years had fewer television sets in their homes than overweight people who hadn’t lost weight. Not surprisingly, they also had more exercise equipment, and burned as many as 1,000 more calories each week on physical activity.

2. Purge the pantry. The Cal Poly study, which looked at 167 weight-loss maintainers and around 300 others seeking treatment for obesity, also found those successful at keeping the weight off had fewer high-fat items in their kitchens, and more fruits, vegetables, and low-fat dairy. (Again, not much of a surprise.)

3. Let kids sleep late on weekends. (Really!) A separate study by researchers in Hong Kong, published in November’s Pediatrics, found letting kids sleep late on weekends and holidays could help them stay thinner. Previous research has established links between lack of sleep and obesity – possibly because sleep deprivation changes levels of our “hunger” hormones. But this study of more than 5,000 kids ages 5 to 15 found that those who made up for lack of weeknight sleep by sleeping later on weekends were much less likely to be overweight than those who did not.

 

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