Obesity Leads to Laziness
Posted on 11 July 2010 by Mac Albert
The link between laziness and obesity has been discussed for quite a long time already. A research was performed for three years on 200 children of seven years of age. The fats of the body and bodily movement capacities were acquired using an accelerometer and check up for body fatness.
It was discovered that as the body builds up 10% more body fat at the age of seven years, it guides to four minutes less reasonable exercise each day by age 10. Alternatively, more action at age of seven did not forecast a relative reduction in the percentage of body fat among seven and 10-year olds. The researchers say that physical idleness comes out to be the result of fatness instead of its cause.

Even though physical indolence may guide to obesity, physical activity has other benefits of fitness, physical condition and pleasure of life for children.
The outcome of the study proposed that keeping a try on diet and better physical activity is the most excellent way to manage obesity.
The researchers from Peninsula Medical School in Plymouth and the University of Plymouth in the UK accepted the study of the researchers.
The purpose of this study was to discover whether laziness or indolence is the reason of obesity in children, or obesity is the reason of indolence. They insisted that there is public health and school-based interferences to build children more lively but they don’t do well in the limitation of obesity.
Tags | Fitness, obesity, Obesity Leads to Laziness, Peninsula Medical School, University of Plymouth




Just to show how truly concerned the authors are about health and well-being, they always feel compelled to include an unflattering picture of a fat person. It’s so much easier to say, “You’re unhealthy.”, than to come out and say, “I don’t like the way you look.” If there ever were a magic pill that made everyone the same size, I wonder what slender people would do to reclaim their sense of moral superiority?