Close X
Friday, November 22, 2024
ADVT 
Health & Fitness

Take a Metro ride to lose extra kilos

Darpan News Desk IANS, 20 Aug, 2014 08:14 AM
  • Take a Metro ride to lose extra kilos
Want to try a sure-shot way of losing extra flab? Leave your car at home and try public transport instead.
 
Commuting to work by active (walking or cycling) and public modes of transport is linked to lower body weight and body fat composition compared with those using cars, suggests a British study.
 
Active commuters are at lower risk of being overweight but there was a lack of good evidence linking active commuting with objective measures of obesity.
 
So a team of researchers from the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine and University College London set out to investigate the relationship between active commuting and two known markers for obesity - body mass index (BMI) and percentage body fat.
 
They analysed 7,534 BMI measurements and 7,424 percentage body fat measurements from men and women taking part in the large United Kingdom Household Longitudinal Study.
 
They found significant health benefits linked to walking, cycling and taking public transport to work.
 
Men who commuted via public or active modes had BMI scores around one point lower than those who used private transport, equating to a difference in weight of three kg for the average man, the study found.
 
Women who commuted via public or active transport had BMI scores around 0.7 points lower than their private transport using counterparts, equating to a difference in weight of 2.5 kg for the average woman.
 
In the study, 76 percent of men and 72 percent of women commuted to work by private motorised transport while 10 percent of men and 11 percent of women reporting using public transport.
 
Only 14 percent of men walked or cycled to work compared with 17 percent of women.
 
According to researchers, the use of public transport and walking and cycling in the journey to and from work “should be considered as part of strategies to reduce the burden of obesity and related health conditions”.
 
The study appeared on the website of the British Medical Journal.

MORE Health & Fitness ARTICLES

Are you suffering from 'always on' stress?

Are you suffering from 'always on' stress?
Are you a victim of "always on" stress? Give your smartphone worries a break even if the battery goes dead or there are no signals to connect to a call...

Are you suffering from 'always on' stress?

Listen to ticking clock, make babies

Listen to ticking clock, make babies
It may sound peculiar but listening to your clock ticking may increase your urge to marry and start a family before childbearing years are over....

Listen to ticking clock, make babies

Bad sleep may increase suicide risk in older adults

Bad sleep may increase suicide risk in older adults
Older adults who complain of poor sleep quality, independent of a depressed mood, are at increased risk for suicide, says a study....

Bad sleep may increase suicide risk in older adults

Allergic to cashews? A process to make it safer

Allergic to cashews? A process to make it safer
Scientists are now developing a method to process cashews -- and potentially other nuts -- that could make them safer to eat for people who are allergic to them...

Allergic to cashews? A process to make it safer

Test to reveal if your coffee is fake

Test to reveal if your coffee is fake
Is your cup of hot coffee brimming with ingredients like starch syrup that are neither sweet nor flavourful? Worry not as a test to detect counterfeit coffee is here...

Test to reveal if your coffee is fake

Anti-depressants may kill your love life

Anti-depressants may kill your love life
"Drugs called selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs), which work mainly through the serotonin system, were found to be affecting men's feelings ...

Anti-depressants may kill your love life