March 5 - Teens Who Eat Breakfast Weigh Less
Teenagers are notorious for their appetites,
but not having any at breakfast time may not be such a good
idea, according to a study by the University of Minnesota's
School of Public Health.
Researchers in the school's Project EAT (Eating
Among Teens) have found new evidence to support the importance
of encouraging youth to eat breakfast regularly. When they examined
the association between breakfast frequency and five-year body
weight change in more than 2,200 adolescents (roughly 1,000
boys and 1,200 girls), they found the daily breakfast eaters
tended to gain less weight and have lower body mass index levels--an
indicator of how appropriate a person's weight is for their
height--than those who had skipped breakfast as adolescents.
The results also indicated that daily breakfast
eaters ate a healthier diet and were more physically active
than breakfast skippers during adolescence. The teens' habits
were assessed by questionnaires.
Mark Pereira, one of the authors, says the study
stands out among the literature on the topic of breakfast habits
and obesity risk because of its size and duration. "The
dose-response findings between breakfast frequency and obesity
risk, even after taking into account physical activity and other
dietary factors, suggests that eating breakfast may have important
effects on overall diet and obesity risk, but experimental studies
are needed to confirm these observations," he says.
At the beginning of the study, those who never
ate breakfast were more likely to be girls and daily breakfast
eaters were more likely to be boys. By the end of the study,
however, the percentage of boys eating breakfast daily had dropped
to the point where their rate matched that of girls.
Over the past two decades, rates of obesity
have doubled in children and nearly tripled in adolescents.
Fifty-seven percent of adolescent females and 33% of males frequently
use unhealthy weight-control behaviors, and it is estimated
that between 12 and 24% of children and adolescents regularly
skip breakfast. The percentage of breakfast skippers also has
been found to increase with age.
Dianne Neumark-Sztainer, principal investigator
of Project EAT, says this research confirms the importance of
teaching adolescents to start the day off right by eating breakfast.
"Although adolescents may think that skipping
breakfast seems like a good way to save on calories, findings
suggest the opposite," she says. "Eating a healthy
breakfast may help adolescents avoid overeating later in the
day and disrupt unhealthy eating patterns, such as not eating
early in the day and eating a lot late in the evening."
The study, "Breakfast Eating and Weight
Change in a 5-Year Prospective Analysis of Adolescents: Project
EAT," is published in the March edition of Pediatrics,
the official journal of the American Academy of Pediatrics.
Source: University of Minnesota
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