
Couch Potatoes at Higher Diabetes Risk
Chances rise 14 percent for every two hours watched a day
By Ed Edelson
HealthScoutNews Reporter
TUESDAY, April 8 (HealthScoutNews) -- Watching
too much television is dangerous for your body.
Every two hours a day spent watching the tube was associated with a 14
percent increase in the risk of diabetes, says a report in the April 9 issue of
the Journal of the American Medical Association. And if you're thinking
about your looks, that two-hour-a-day stint is associated with a 23 percent
increase in obesity, says the report by Dr. Frank B. Hu and colleagues at the
Harvard School of Public Health and Brigham and Women's Hospital. The conclusions come from the 50,000-strong Nurses' Health Study, a
long-running project tracking the health of women. Just sitting around in general is bad for you, public health authorities
agree. But motionless TV watching is especially bad because it results in a
lower metabolic rate than other sit-down activities, such as sewing, playing
board games, driving a car or even just reading, which means putting on more fat
that can tip the balance toward diabetes, the report says. It's not just that being a couch potato in general is bad, the researchers
say. The women who spent more time watching TV also had bad eating habits,
putting away more the high-calorie, fat-rich foods associated with both heart
disease and diabetes, an eating pattern "which is directly related to
commercial advertisements and food cues appearing on TV," the study says. The net result: more than 3,750 women who had a body-mass index under 30, the
point at which obesity begins, became obese during the six years of the study,
and 1,515 women developed Type 2 diabetes. The link between TV watching and
diabetes was clear when the results were adjusted to take into account factors
such as smoking, age, exercise levels and diet. "This is pretty robust data," says Dr. Francine Kaufman, an
endocrinologist at Children's Hospital in Los Angeles who is president of the
American Diabetes Association. "It confirms the studies in children showing
that stopping sedentary behavior has an immense effect on health. We've known
this intuitively, and now we have good evidence for it." The heart people as well as the diabetes people are pushing for a simple
remedy to the problem, Kaufman says: Just stand up and walk. The recommendation
is for a minimum of a 30-minute brisk walk every day, five days a week. Kaufman acknowledges that the way our society is built, with families living
in suburbs that require a car ride to get anywhere and workers sitting at desks
all day, makes it hard for most people to fit a long walk into their everyday
activity. She has some suggestions. If you work on a high floor, walk down
instead of taking the elevator. When you go for lunch, don't duck into the
nearest place, but walk a few blocks. And Hu, who is associate professor of nutrition and epidemiology at the
Harvard School of Public Health, notes in a statement that "even doing
chores around the yard and house can help." The study suggests an even more basic measure. Turning off the TV set and
standing or walking around the home for two hours a day reduces the risk of
obesity by 9 percent and the risk of diabetes by 12 percent, it found. More information You can get some practical advice about working up a walking program from The
Walking Site. Learn more about Type 2 diabetes from the American
Diabetes Association.
SOURCES: Francine Kaufman, M.D., endocrinologist, Children's Hospital, Los Angeles, and president, American Diabetes Association, Alexandria, Va.; statement, Harvard School of Public Health; April 9, 2003, Journal of the American Medical Association
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