IN PRINT: Study finds marriage makes women fat

The New York Times reports that a study of 6,000 Australian women has found that even childless women who live with a mate gain significantly more weight over 10 years than their single sisters.

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IN PRINT: Study finds marriage makes women fat

POSTED: Tuesday, January 5, 2010, 8:19 PM
Filed Under: Food News | In Print

The New York Times reports that a study of 6,000 Australian women has found that even childless women who live with a mate gain significantly more weight over 10 years than their single sisters.

After adjusting for other variables, the 10-year weight gain for an average 140-pound woman was 20 pounds if she had a baby and a partner, 15 if she had a partner but no baby, and only 11 pounds if she was childless with no partner....

There is no reason to believe that having a partner causes metabolic changes, so the weight gain among childless women with partners was almost surely caused by altered behavior. Moreover, there was a steady weight gain among all women over the 10 years of the study.

Quit your cackling, husbands.� The other shoe is about to drop on your pudgy butts, too:

The study included only women, but the researchers cited one earlier study that showed an increase in obesity among men who had children, adding further evidence that social and behavioral factors are part of the explanation.

Posted by Felicia D'Ambrosio @ 8:19 PM  Permalink | Post a comment
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