What Doctors Don't Tell You Australia/NZ

UPFRONT

The best type of intermittent fasting

Intermittent fasting comes in several shapes and sizes—but the most effective could be the time-restricted approach. It means eating your last meal early enough to allow for up to 14 hours without eating before having breakfast.

It’s the diet that is most likely to reduce your chances of developing type 2 diabetes and improve your overall health, say researchers from the University of Georgia.

“What we’ve been taught for many decades is that we should eat three meals a day plus snacking in between,” said researcher Krzysztof Czaja. But the ideal is a window of 12 to 14 hours—which includes the hours we sleep—without any food, including snacks. Setting this limit means we are eating around 550 fewer calories per day.

After reviewing the evidence, the researchers found that snacking between meals was the problem. Snacking doesn’t allow the body to process a main meal and can overload our insulin receptors, which eventually leads to insulin resistance and type 2 diabetes. Snacking between meals also increases calorie consumption, making it harder to lose weight.

The worst time to snack is after the last meal of the day. “Avoid late-night eating. Our midnight snacks spike insulin, so instead of us going into a resting state when we sleep, our gut is working on digestion,” Czaja explained.

And when we do eat, we should make sure we’re eating more fat and less sugar, so choose eggs over sugary cereals for breakfast, for instance.

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from What Doctors Don't Tell You Australia/NZ

What Doctors Don't Tell You Australia/NZ5 min read
No Need To Panic
Forty-three-year-old father of one Anthony was happily married and doing a job he enjoyed when he began experiencing panic attacks “out of nowhere.” They could happen anywhere—in the supermarket, on the train to work, even in the garden at home—day o
What Doctors Don't Tell You Australia/NZ8 min read
Upfront
Women are going for an outdoor swim in cold water to relieve their menstrual and perimenopausal symptoms—and according to one survey, it works. The women have said that the severity of typical symptoms, such as hot flushes, anxiety, mood swings and b
What Doctors Don't Tell You Australia/NZ1 min read
Bye-bye, Bipolar
Because clinical depression is such a sensitive diagnosis, no patients were willing to talk directly to WDDTY about their TMS treatments. However, BrainsWay has numerous patient testimonials on its website (brainsway.com/knowledge-center/video-galler

Related Books & Audiobooks