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APRIL 2007

IN A FINDING THAT challenges many of the promises of the multibillion- dollar diet and fitness industry, a new study suggests that cutting calories and exercising more are both equally effective for losing weight.…

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FEBRUARY 2008

Making sense of seemingly contrary findings on the risks from being overweight.…

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AUGUST 2007

While “three square meals a day” may be conventional wisdom, it’s not the whole story for folks in their 60s and beyond. A new study published in the Journal of the American Dietetic Association reports that regular snacking may actually help seniors fill the nutritional gap that often comes with aging.…

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JULY 2008

A tape measure may be as good a gauge of healthy weight as your bathroom scale. Though obesity raises your risk for chronic health conditions, recent research suggests that where you carry extra pounds makes a difference. New studies link “belly fat” with increased risk of death, heart disease and cancer, even risk of dementia.…

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OCTOBER 2009

Don’t stress out over the latest Harvard study—doing so could make you fatter. Jason P. Block, MD, MPH, and colleagues report that stress can cause people who are already overweight to pack on more pounds.…

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Special Reports (1)

 
DECEMBER 2007

TUFTS PSYCHOLOGY professor Robin Kanarek, PhD, laughs at the memory of a visiting family from Finland’s encounter with American portion sizes.…

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Health Updates (2)

 
April 2010

If you're not overweight and want to stay that way, you may need to exercise even more than the 150 minutes per week that federal guidelines recommend. And if you're already overweight, it may be too late for exercise to get you slim — although physical activity can still have important benefits against chronic disease. Those were the depressing findings of a new analysis of data on 34,079 healthy US women, average age 54, from the Women's Health Study. Over an average follow-up of 13 years, the women gained an average of nearly 6 pounds. Among the 13.3% who gained less than this, the average amount of exercise was 60 minutes daily — 420 minutes a week — of moderate physical activity, such as brisk walking (or half as much intense exercise, such as jogging). Physical activity was associated with reduced weight gain, but only among normal-weight women; for those with a BMI of 25 and up, exercise had no effect on weight control. The women maintained a "usual diet," suggesting that if you can't carve out an hour for activity daily, the only way to keep the pounds off is restricting calories. — JAMA…

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February 2010

If you're not overweight and want to stay that way, you may need to exercise even more than the 150 minutes per week that federal guidelines recommend. And if you're already overweight, it may be too late for exercise to get you slim — although physical activity can still have important benefits against chronic disease. Those were the depressing findings of a new analysis of data on 34,079 healthy US women, average age 54, from the Women's Health Study. Over an average follow-up of 13 years, the women gained an average of nearly 6 pounds. Among the 13.3% who gained less than this, the average amount of exercise was 60 minutes daily — 420 minutes a week — of moderate physical activity, such as brisk walking (or half as much intense exercise, such as jogging). Physical activity was associated with reduced weight gain, but only among normal-weight women; for those with a BMI of 25 and up, exercise had no effect on weight control. The women maintained a "usual diet," suggesting that if you can't carve out an hour for activity daily, the only way to keep the pounds off is restricting calories. — JAMA …

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High-protein diets make kidneys work harder—an issue for the more than 20 million Americans who have chronic kidney disease but don’t know it.

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