Showing posts with label together. Show all posts
Showing posts with label together. Show all posts

Thursday, August 15, 2013

Tackling Diet, Exercise Together Produces Best Results: Study

If you have to choose one at a time, hit the gym first, researchers add

By Robert Preidt

HealthDay Reporter

MONDAY, April 22 (HealthDay News) -- If you're trying to get healthy, tackling both diet and exercise is better than trying to improve one lifestyle habit at a time, new research suggests.

The researchers did add that if you need to start with just one lifestyle change, choose exercise. They found that changing diet first may interfere with attempts to establish a regular exercise routine.

The study included 200 people, aged 45 and older, who were inactive and had poor diets. They were split into four groups: new diet and exercise habits at the same time; diet changes first and starting exercise a few months later; starting exercise first and making diet changes a few months later; and no diet or exercise changes.

The groups received telephone coaching and were tracked for a year. Those who made diet and exercise changes at the same time were most likely to meet U.S. guidelines for exercise (150 minutes per week) and nutrition (5 to 9 servings of fruit and vegetables per day), and to keep calories from saturated fat at less than 10 percent of their total intake of calories.

The people who started with exercise first and diet changes a few months later also did a good job of meeting both the exercise and diet goals, but not quite as good as those who made exercise and diet changes at the same time, the Stanford University School of Medicine researchers said in a news release from Stanford.

The participants who made diet changes first and started exercise later did a good job of meeting the dietary goals but didn't meet their exercise targets. This may be because each type of change has unique characteristics, explained study author Abby King, a professor of health research and policy and of medicine.

"With dietary habits, you have no choice; you have to eat. You don't have to find extra time to eat because it's already in your schedule. So the focus is more on substituting the right kinds of food to eat," she said in the news release.

However, people with busy schedules may have difficulty finding time for exercise. King noted that even the people in the most successful group (diet and exercise changes at the same time) initially had trouble meeting their exercise goal, but did achieve it by the end of the study.

The study was published online April 21 in the journal Annals of Behavioral Medicine.


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Wednesday, August 14, 2013

Tackling Diet, Exercise Together Produces Best Results: Study

News Picture: Tackling Diet, Exercise Together Produces Best Results: Study

MONDAY, April 22 (HealthDay News) -- If you're trying to get healthy, tackling both diet and exercise is better than trying to improve one lifestyle habit at a time, new research suggests.

The researchers did add that if you need to start with just one lifestyle change, choose exercise. They found that changing diet first may interfere with attempts to establish a regular exercise routine.

The study included 200 people, aged 45 and older, who were inactive and had poor diets. They were split into four groups: new diet and exercise habits at the same time; diet changes first and starting exercise a few months later; starting exercise first and making diet changes a few months later; and no diet or exercise changes.

The groups received telephone coaching and were tracked for a year. Those who made diet and exercise changes at the same time were most likely to meet U.S. guidelines for exercise (150 minutes per week) and nutrition (5 to 9 servings of fruit and vegetables per day), and to keep calories from saturated fat at less than 10 percent of their total intake of calories.

The people who started with exercise first and diet changes a few months later also did a good job of meeting both the exercise and diet goals, but not quite as good as those who made exercise and diet changes at the same time, the Stanford University School of Medicine researchers said in a news release from Stanford.

The participants who made diet changes first and started exercise later did a good job of meeting the dietary goals but didn't meet their exercise targets. This may be because each type of change has unique characteristics, explained study author Abby King, a professor of health research and policy and of medicine.

"With dietary habits, you have no choice; you have to eat. You don't have to find extra time to eat because it's already in your schedule. So the focus is more on substituting the right kinds of food to eat," she said in the news release.

However, people with busy schedules may have difficulty finding time for exercise. King noted that even the people in the most successful group (diet and exercise changes at the same time) initially had trouble meeting their exercise goal, but did achieve it by the end of the study.

The study was published online April 21 in the journal Annals of Behavioral Medicine.

-- Robert Preidt MedicalNews
Copyright © 2013 HealthDay. All rights reserved. SOURCE: Stanford University, news release, April 21, 2013



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New Study: Diet and Exercise Changes Work Best Together, Not One at a Time

It's the age-old question for people looking to get healthy: Eat better or start working out? Now, a study published yesterday in the Annals of Behavioral Medicine finds that for best results, we should make both of these changes at once -- and that dieting first may actually sabotage later attempts at a regular exercise routine.

This may seem obvious: Of course you're going to get healthier faster if you're doing two good-for-you things, rather than just one. But previous research on this topic has been inconsistent; some experts believe that trying to address several health issues at once can be overwhelming or counterproductive, and that taking baby steps to improve one thing a time is the best approach.

Stanford University researchers set out to see how food and fitness, specifically, work together, versus separately. For 12 months, they provided counseling to four groups of volunteers: One learned to make dietary and exercise changes at the same time, one changed diet first and then exercise a few months later, one did the opposite, and one did not learn to make any diet or exercise changes.

Even though they had more new goals to think about at once (150 minutes of exercise per week, five to nine servings of produce per day, reducing saturated fat), the diet-plus-exercise group was most likely to meet them all by the end of the study period. The exercise-first group also did an OK job with improvements over the course of the whole year.

But those who started with diet first had a much harder time ramping up their exercise routines a few months later. Finding time to work out may be harder for busy people swapping in healthier foods, the researchers say -- and if you're already doing the easier one, there may be less incentive to make a more difficult change later on.

Okay, so, shameless plug time: We're big believers in making lots of good things happen all at once -- that's why we designed our Drop 10 Diet to include healthy recipes AND a killer workout program so you can shape up fast for summer. We already knew that it was a winning combination (check out these success stories!), but it's nice to know that science has our back, too. And yes, you can totally get started today!

Do you find that eating healthy and working out go hand in hand? Tweet us your thoughts at @amandaemac and @SELFmagazine.

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Image Credit: Terry Doyle


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Thursday, July 18, 2013

More U.S. Couples Living Together Instead of Marrying, CDC Finds

And more women getting pregnant while cohabiting

By Amanda Gardner

HealthDay Reporter

THURSDAY, April 4 (HealthDay News) -- Many more American women are living with their partners rather than tying the knot, a new government survey finds.

And they live together longer than couples in the recent past, and many more get pregnant before marriage, according to the survey released Thursday by the National Center for Health Statistics, which is part of the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

Nearly half of women aged 15 to 44 years old "cohabited" outside of marriage between 2006 and 2010, compared with 43 percent in 2002 and 34 percent in 1995. The report is based on in-person interviews with more than 12,000 women in that age group.

One reason more people are living together is a well-documented delay in the age at which people are marrying, said study lead author Casey Copen, a demographer with the National Center for Health Statistics.

"Cohabiting couples may be waiting for improved financial stability before they make a decision to marry and, in the process, become pregnant and have a baby," she said. "As you cohabit longer, there's more of a chance to become pregnant."

Many of these arrangements occur at a young age, with one-quarter of women cohabiting by age 20 and three-quarters saying they had lived with a partner by age 30.

During the first year of living together, nearly 20 percent became pregnant and went on to give birth, according to the report.

Along with this trend, fewer women reported getting married in the period from 2006 to 2010 than in either 2002 or 1995 (23 percent, 30 percent and 39 percent, respectively). Of those who became pregnant the first year, 19 percent got married within six months of the pregnancy, versus 32 percent in 1995.

Education and income play a role in how long women cohabit and whether they get pregnant or marry, Copen said.

"Those who have less than a high school degree are cohabiting for longer periods of time," Copen said. "Women who have a bachelor's degree or higher are more likely to move into marriage."

Less educated women were also more likely to become pregnant while they were living with their partner.

The rate of cohabitation increased in all racial and ethnic groups except for Asian women.

Here are some highlights of the report:

For the period between 2006 and 2010, 23 percent of recent births happened while the couple was living together, up from 14 percent in 2002.The length of time couples lived together averaged 22 months in 2006 to 2010, compared with 13 months in 1995.About 40 percent of people living together got married within the first three years, while 32 percent continued to live together and 27 percent broke up.More white women (44 percent) and foreign-born Hispanic women (42 percent) married their partners within the first three years of living together compared with only 31 percent each for black women and Hispanic women born in the United States.Women who had not finished high school were more likely to live with someone (70 percent) than women who had finished college or beyond (47 percent).Women with more education were more likely to marry than those with less education, 53 percent within three years versus 30 percent.

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Friday, July 5, 2013

Autism, ADHD Often Occur Together, Research Shows

Study finds nearly one-third of kids with autism also have problems with attention and hyperactivityConditions such as autism, ADHD appear to drive

By Brenda Goodman

HealthDay Reporter

THURSDAY, June 6 (HealthDay News) -- Almost 30 percent of young children with autism also show signs of attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD), a rate that's three times higher than it is in the general population, a new study shows.

"We don't know the cause for ADHD in most cases. We don't know the cause of autism in most cases. It's not surprising that something that's going to affect the brain and cause one developmental outcome may also cause a second developmental outcome," said Dr. Andrew Adesman, chief of developmental and behavioral pediatrics at Steven and Alexandra Cohen Children's Medical Center in Lake Success, N.Y. He was not involved in the study.

Kids in the study who had both problems together also tended to have more difficulty learning and socializing than children who had autism alone.

The researchers noted that the treatment of ADHD may benefit children with autism if they aren't making progress with autism treatment programs, which often require sustained focus on specific skills.

"In a child [with autism] who has great difficulties with attention, or hyperactivity or both, you really have to layer in another level of intervention strategies for them," said study author Rebecca Landa, director of the Center for Autism and Related Disorders at the Kennedy Krieger Institute in Baltimore.

For the study, which is published in the June 5 online issue of the journal Autism, researchers asked parents of kids enrolled in a community-based study of child development about symptoms of attention and hyperactivity -- whether or not children could wait their turn, interrupted others who were speaking, fiddled with things during meals or could not slow down, for example. All the children in the study were between the ages of 4 and 8.

Out of 62 children diagnosed with autism, 18 (29 percent) also showed signs of ADHD.

A previous study of slightly older children found that 31 percent of children had the two disorders together.

"It's not surprising," said Dr. Patty Manning-Courtney, director of the Kelly O'Leary Center for Autism Spectrum Disorders at Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center.

"What's good about this study is that they went to the trouble to look at who met diagnostic criteria and what was different about those children," said Manning-Courtney, who was not involved in the research.

All the children who had both problems together were boys. Boys have higher rates of autism and ADHD than girls, research shows.

One limitation of the study was that researchers had to rely on questionnaires that are meant to spot ADHD in typical children. There really aren't good tests for attention and hyperactivity developed for kids with autism, and their problems may look different than those seen in typical school-aged children.


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Tuesday, April 2, 2013

Patrick Duigan & Annisa Carstensen, together a year


Browse through the street style and fashion photoblog online at Glamour.com. Check out the latest fashion, as worn by you!

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Sunday, March 31, 2013

Steve Wilcox & Louise Brierley-Ingham, together 14 months


Browse through the street style and fashion photoblog online at Glamour.com. Check out the latest fashion, as worn by you!

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Saturday, March 30, 2013

Carolina Mostert & Graham Benham, together three months


Browse through the street style and fashion photoblog online at Glamour.com. Check out the latest fashion, as worn by you!

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Monday, March 25, 2013

The couple that sprays together, stays together


Gucci Guilty Black Pour Femme - Browse through the latest beauty products online at Glamour.com. Visit Glamour.com for beauty product reviews and advice.

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Tuesday, January 29, 2013

Robert Pattinson and Kristen Stewart together at Golden Globes afterparty


Robert Pattinson and Kristen Stewart were spotted partying together at a Golden Globes afterparty on Monday night, it has been reported.

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Friday, January 11, 2013

Lily Cole and Jack Dorsey holiday together in St Barts


Do our eyes deceive us or have model Lily Cole and Twitter founder Jack Dorsey become a little more than just super smart friends? We snapped the pair getting particularly close on a luxury yacht in St Barts, were they partied with friends on New Year’s Eve

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