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Reduced sleep gives people more waking time to eat
VoorArgument
1
#371712
Fewer hours of sleep increases the waking time in which people have to eat.
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Tackling obesity in the UK »
Tackling obesity in the UK
Tackling obesity in the UKâWith concern growing that the Foresight analysisâthat 50% of the UK population could be obese by 2050, at an annual cost to the nation of around ÂŁ50 billion per year [2]âsubstantially underestimates the scale of the unfolding obesity crisis, the College of Contemporary Health is working with the wider policy community to develop a whole systems map of the obesity crisis and the potential responses.âF1CEB7
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Causes of obesity »
Causes of obesity
Causes of obesityâUnderstanding the causes of obesity is critical to the success of prevention and treatment strategies. However, while (simply put) obesity occurs when energy intake from food and drink consumption is greater than energy expenditure through the bodyâs metabolism and physical activity over a prolonged period (resulting in the accumulation of excess body fat), in reality many complex behavioural and societal factors contribute systemically to the current crisis and no single influence dominates.â5CD992
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Industrial way of life is obesogenic »
Industrial way of life is obesogenic
Industrial way of life is obesogenicâRapid societal changesâfor example, in food production, motorised transport and work/home lifestyle patternsâhave placed human physiology (which has evolved to cope with an under-supply of food and high energy expenditure) under new stresses, and revealed an underlying genetic tendency to accumulate and conserve energy (i.e. gain weight) in a high proportion of the population. In this sense, obesity can be construed as a normal physiological response to an abnormal environment.â5CD992
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Reduced sleep »
Reduced sleep
Reduced sleepâEmerging 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.â5CD992
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Reduced sleep may increase energy intake »
Reduced sleep may increase energy intake
Reduced sleep may increase energy intakeââ5CD992
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Reduced sleep gives people more waking time to eat
Reduced sleep gives people more waking time to eatâFewer hours of sleep increases the waking time in which people have to eat.â98CE71
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[1]
The link between short sleep duration and obesity: we should recommend more sleep to prevent obesity.
Citerend uit:
S. Taheri
Publication info:
2006, Arch Dis Child. 2006; 91:881-4.
Geciteerd door:
David Price
0:07 AM 7 January 2015 GMT
Citerank:
(3)
371707
Reduced sleep
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.
55
5CD992
,
399899
Reduced sleep
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.
55
5CD992
,
399951
Reduced sleep gives people more waking time to eat
Fewer hours of sleep increases the waking time in which people have to eat.
11
98CE71
URL:
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2082964/
Fragment-
Short sleep duration can affect both energy intake and energy expenditure. It results in tiredness that may hamper physical activity, and alters metabolic hormones to increase appetite and affect food selection. Additionally, extra time awake provides increased opportunity for food intake. Other potential mechanisms include effects of sleep on basal metabolic rate, thermic effect of food and nonâexercise activity thermogenesis.
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Gemaakt door:
David Price
NodeID:
#371712
Node type:
SupportiveArgument
Gemaakt op (GMT):
1/7/2015 12:03:00 AM
Laatste bewerking (GMT):
1/7/2015 12:05:00 AM
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