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.
Source: Health Day News
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