Close X
Saturday, November 30, 2024
ADVT 
Health

How Eating 'Healthy' Food Can Make You Fat!

Darpan News Desk IANS, 28 Dec, 2015 12:10 PM
    Eating too much is typically considered as one of the prime reasons for obesity but when people eat what they consider to be healthy food, they eat more than the recommended serving size because they associate "healthy" with less filling, say researchers, including one of Indian-origin.
     
    The findings suggest that the recent increase of healthy food labels may be ironically contributing to the obesity epidemic rather than reducing it.
     
    Raj Raghunathan from University of Texas at Austin, and colleagues utilised a multi-method approach to investigate the "healthy equal to less filling" intuition.
     
    The first study was conducted with 50 undergraduate students at a large public university and employed the well-established Implicit Association Test to provide evidence for an inverse relationship between the concepts of healthy and filling.
     
    The second study was a field study conducted with 40 graduate students and measured participants' hunger levels after consuming a cookie that is either portrayed as healthy or unhealthy to test the effect of health portrayals on experienced hunger levels.
     
    The third study was conducted with 72 undergraduate students in a realistic scenario to measure the impact of health portrayals on the amount of food ordered before watching a short film and the actual amount of food consumed during the film.
     
    The set of three studies converges on the idea that consumers hold an implicit belief that healthy foods are less filling than unhealthy foods.
     
    The researchers demonstrated that portraying a food as healthy as opposed to unhealthy using a front-of-package nutritional scale impacts consumer judgment and behaviour.
     
    Surprisingly, even consumers who said they disagree with the idea that healthy foods are less filling than unhealthy foods are subject to the same biases.
     
    The study was published in the Journal of the Association for Consumer Research.

    MORE Health ARTICLES

    Don't ignore your child's leg pain, experts warn

    Don't ignore your child's leg pain, experts warn
    Does your child complain of pain in the leg? Don't ignore this as "growing up pain" but consider it as a signal for bone or knee-related ailments in the future, health experts caution....

    Don't ignore your child's leg pain, experts warn

    Frustration turns to tears of joy as gay couples get marriage licenses, head to Vegas chapels

    Frustration turns to tears of joy as gay couples get marriage licenses, head to Vegas chapels
    LAS VEGAS - Daniel Carroll and Dayvin Bartolome stood on the steps of the marriage license bureau in Las Vegas, researching where they might tie the knot after 14 years together.

    Frustration turns to tears of joy as gay couples get marriage licenses, head to Vegas chapels

    Decaffeinated coffee good for liver

    Decaffeinated coffee good for liver
    Drinking decaffeinated coffee is good for your liver, shows a study.

    Decaffeinated coffee good for liver

    Canadian Ebola vaccine to be shipped to Geneva next week

    Canadian Ebola vaccine to be shipped to Geneva next week
    TORONTO - Experimental Ebola vaccine that Canada has donated to the World Health Organization will be shipped to Geneva next week, the global health agency said Thursday.

    Canadian Ebola vaccine to be shipped to Geneva next week

    Bad sleep quality, not duration, triggers insomnia

    Bad sleep quality, not duration, triggers insomnia
    Sleep problems like insomnia being reported among the elderly are more likely because of bad sleep quality and not their duration....

    Bad sleep quality, not duration, triggers insomnia

    Men twice as likely as women to die after hip fracture

    Men twice as likely as women to die after hip fracture
    Men are the "weaker sex" in terms of death and disability caused by osteoporosis as their bone health is simply being ignored by the healthcare systems, shows a study....

    Men twice as likely as women to die after hip fracture