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Reduced sleep Why1 #371707 Emerging evidence suggests that people who get insufficient sleep have a higher risk of weight gain and obesity than people who get seven to eight hours of sleep a night. | Source: S. Taheri [4] |
+Citations (6) - CitationsAdd new citationList by: CiterankMapLink[3] Early life risk factors for obesity in childhood: cohort study
Author: J. J. Reilly, J. Armstrong, A. R. Dorosty, et al Publication info: 2005, BMJ. 2005; 330:1357 Cited by: David Price 11:52 PM 6 January 2015 GMT Citerank: (1) 399899Reduced sleepEmerging evidence suggests that people who get insufficient sleep have a higher risk of weight gain and obesity than people who get seven to eight hours of sleep a night.555CD992 URL: | Excerpt / Summary Eight of 25 putative risk factors were associated with a risk of obesity in the final models: parental obesity (both parents: adjusted odds ratio, 10.44, 95% confidence interval 5.11 to 21.32), very early (by 43 months) body mass index or adiposity rebound (15.00, 5.32 to 42.30), more than eight hours spent watching television per week at age 3 years (1.55, 1.13 to 2.12), catch-up growth (2.60, 1.09 to 6.16), standard deviation score for weight at age 8 months (3.13, 1.43 to 6.85) and 18 months (2.65, 1.25 to 5.59); weight gain in first year (1.06, 1.02 to 1.10 per 100 g increase); birth weight, per 100 g (1.05, 1.03 to 1.07); and short (< 10.5 hours) sleep duration at age 3 years (1.45, 1.10 to 1.89). |
Link[5] Losing just half an hour of sleep 'can impact body weight and metabolism'
Author: Shahrad Taheri Publication info: 2015 March, 9 Cited by: David Price 0:32 AM 19 March 2015 GMT Citerank: (1) 399899Reduced sleepEmerging evidence suggests that people who get insufficient sleep have a higher risk of weight gain and obesity than people who get seven to eight hours of sleep a night.555CD992 URL: | Excerpt / Summary The findings of new research presented at ENDO 2015, the annual meeting of the Endocrine Society in San Diego, CA, suggest that losing just half an hour of sleep can have long-term consequences for body weight and metabolism.
For the study, researchers from Weill Cornell Medical College in Doha, Qatar, recruited 522 patients who had been recently diagnosed with type 2 diabetes.
At the start of the study, the participants' height, weight and waist circumference were measured and samples of their blood were analyzed for insulin sensitivity.
The participants were required to keep sleep diaries, from which their weekday "sleep debt" was calculated.
The participants at the start of the study who had weekday sleep debt were found to be 72% more likely to be obese, compared with participants who had no weekday sleep debt. By follow-up at 6 months, the association between weekday sleep debt and obesity and insulin resistance was found to be significant.
At 12-month follow-up, the researchers calculated that for every 30 minutes of weekday sleep debt there was an associated 17% increased risk of obesity and 39% increased risk of insulin resistance. |
Link[6] Work & Sleep: Making the Weight Connection
Author: Angela Pirisi Publication info: 2015, Focus on Obesity in the Workplace, CONDUIT, Spring 2015 Cited by: David Price 11:48 PM 14 May 2015 GMT Citerank: (1) 399899Reduced sleepEmerging evidence suggests that people who get insufficient sleep have a higher risk of weight gain and obesity than people who get seven to eight hours of sleep a night.555CD992 URL: | Excerpt / Summary Sleep is essential for good health, but for many people, work is a major factor that stands in the way, given the longstanding tradition of shift work and the trend of employees being accessible 24/7 via smart phones and tablets. The workplace, both in terms of psychological demands (or work load) and the physical environment, seems to play a significant contributing role to sleep loss, which subsequently has a deleterious effect on weight management. That’s because missing out on both the quantity and quality of sleep sets in motion biological and behavioural processes that lead to increased food intake, fat storage and physical inactivity. |
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