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Eating out may encourage bingeing
New York -
Women tend to eat more calories and fat when dining out, regardless of
what their usual eating habits are, new research suggests.
The study, which included both
binge-eaters and dieters, found that both groups of women ate out
frequently -- and downed between 200 and 300 extra calories a day in
the process.
Moreover, women who were prone to
binge-eating problems often overindulged when eating out. One-third of
their bingeing "episodes" over the two-week study occurred in a
restaurant, according to findings published in the Western Journal of
Nursing Research.
"Restaurants may present a high-risk
environment for bingers and dieters, contributing to loss of control
and excess consumption," writes study author Dr. Gayle M. Timmerman,
an associate professor at the University of Texas at Austin School of
Nursing.
Many experts have pointed to
Americans' love of dining out as a potential reason for the nation's
ever-expanding waistline. Fast food, as well as the hefty portion
sizes at restaurants in general, catch much of the blame.
In the new study, Timmerman found
that women ate only about a quarter of their restaurant meals at
fast-food places, and they usually skipped dessert whenever they ate
out.
Still, dieters and binge-eaters alike
ate 200 to 300 extra calories, as well as 10 to 16 extra grams of fat,
on days when they dined out.
These extras are bound to add up,
according to Timmerman. On average, she found, study participants ate
at a restaurant or got take-out on seven of the 14 days they were
followed.
Over a year, she estimates, that
could translate into a 12-pound weight gain.
The fact that binge-eaters often lost
control at restaurants counters the idea that bingeing is a solely
private habit, according to Timmerman. Indeed, she writes, the "ample
delicious food cues" at restaurants are likely to challenge
binge-eaters' control. -- Reuters Limited
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