Pages

How to reach and maintain your ideal weight, using common sense.
This blog is for healthy individuals who are mobile.



Sunday, March 4, 2012

Remember your water

One way to help control your food cravings, and appetite, is to drink plenty of water. Water fills up your stomach and keeps you full.

The article below illustrates this - well...it illustrates that when trying to lose weight, a relatively easy way to do it is to give up on Pepsi or Coke or whatever it is you drink. On the other hand, I can't really advocate diet drinks - the artificial sweeteners they use aren't particularly safe...

From UPI.com: Lose 4-5 lbs. by drinking water, not soda

CHAPEL HILL, N.C., March 2 (UPI) -- Substituting water or diet soft drinks for drinks with calories can help people lose 4 to 5 pounds in six months, U.S. researchers suggested.

Study author Deborah Tate, associate professor of nutrition and of health behavior and health education at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill's Gillings School of Global Public Health, compared weight loss for 318 overweight or obese people drinking different beverages.

People were divided into three groups: those who switched from calorie-laden beverages to diet soft drinks; those who switched to water; and those who were not counseled to change beverages but received general information about healthy choices that could lead to weight loss.

All three groups attended monthly group sessions and had access to a group-specific Web site for six months.

"Substituting non-caloric beverages -- whether it's water, diet soft drinks or something else -- can be a clear and simple change for people who want to lose or maintain weight," Tate said in a statement. "If this were done on a large scale, it could significantly reduce the increasing public health problem of obesity."

All three groups experienced small reductions in weight and waist circumference during the six-month study.

However, people who switched to calorie-free beverages were twice as likely to lose 5 percent or more of their body weight than those who were not counseled to change beverages.

In addition, people in the group who drank mostly water had lower fasting glucose levels and better hydration levels than the control group, the study found.

The study was published in the American Journal of Clinical Nutrition.

No comments:

Post a Comment