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Many people could reduce their 'feeding window' by three hours

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    Many people could reduce their 'feeding window' by three hours

    A new study from the University of Surrey has revealed 'real world' factors that influence people's interest in adopting a dietary pattern called time-restricted feeding.

    According to NHS England, 67 per cent of men and 60 per cent of women in the UK are overweight or obese -- with more than 11,000 yearly hospital admissions directly attributable to obesity.

    Time-restricted feeding, which is a type of intermittent fasting, is the practice of restricting the time between the first and last food intake each day -- therefore prolonging the daily fasting period.

    In a study published by the journal Appetite researchers from Surrey surveyed 608 people to determine the factors that would help or hinder them in adopting a time-restricted feeding routine.

    The study found that the majority of respondents had a feeding window of between 10 to 14 hours on workdays and free days. More than 400 respondents believed they could reduce their feeding window by three hours if there were clear health benefits associated with the practice.

    The study also revealed that the percentage of participants' likelihood of taking up intermittent fasting declined as the duration of the time restriction increased -- with 85 per cent believing they could reduce their window by up to 0.5 hours, to 20 per cent believing they could sustain a reduction of four or more hours.

    The respondents also pinpointed time availability (69 per cent), ease of following (62 per cent), and work commitments (54 per cent) as key factors that might influence their decision to adopt intermittent fasting.

    Jonathan Johnston, senior author of the study and Professor of Chronobiology and Integrative Physiology at the University of Surrey, said:

    "Time-restricted feeding has the potential to become an extremely effective tool in the fight against the obesity epidemic facing many countries. However, the study clearly shows that the ability of people to restrict their daily feeding window is dependent on their individual lifestyles."

    #2
    Having a small eating window works. But I think it's also important to space out the time between meals, to reduce the insulin load and to give the body time to properly perform digestion.

    Combining the two has been effective for me.

    Comment


      #3
      Keeping busy makes it easy.

      Do gardening.
      Go running
      Go to the gym.

      Comment


        #4
        I hate reports/studies like this because I believe it's the wrong advice and approach for healthy individuals, for obese individuals any method that works to get you to lose weight by all means do it, being obese is more determential to your health than any "diet" style you adapt that causes you to lose weight will have so again by all means you find something that works for you do it.
        For general losing weight advice its Calories in - Calories out. Simple as that. If you feel good eating 3 times a day than spread your calories out 3 times a day, or if you feel better only eating twice a day than spread your calories out twice a day and so and so on.

        For body composition transformations (losing fat and retaining-to-growing muscle)
        -Eat 3-5 times a day with a window of at least 2 hours in between meals
        -Each meal to be at least a minimum of 20grams of protein
        --Macros
        ----Fats = .25g x lb of body weight.
        ----Protein = .7g x lb of body weight (increase gradually to 1g x lb of body weight as you lean out).
        ----Carbs = whatever is left in your Calorie intake goals.
        -Calories deficit should be no more than a 1.5-2lb a week cut.
        -Workout with Heavyweights 80-85% of your max.
        -Keep cardio low (it is not where your weight loss should be coming from)
        -Meal timing = Post workout meal should be the highest carb meal of the day with preworkout being the 2nd highest carb meal of the day. (try to eat 1 hr before and within 1 hour after workout)
        -Stay Consistent, all this just moves the needle by micro amounts this why this needs to be done daily to accomplish the goal by accumulation of discipline and dedication.

        Great apps to track your progress is
        -Happy Scale on IOS
        -Simple Weight Tracker on Android
        and remember your weight will always fluctuate no matter what someone day you will be down .5lb next same or even back up .5lb as long as you weight is tracking downwards and you are averaging downward at a steady rate 1.5lb-2lbs you should be good, and these apps here will track your weight and give you averages on a graph that easy to understand.

        GOOD LUCK.

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