E-mail spam can be good for you if it comes as a steady
stream of e-mails nagging about healthy habits, Canadian
researchers said.
People who were spammed about healthy eating and keeping
active, tended to exercise and lose weight, according to
the researchers at the University of Alberta.
For 12 weeks, Dr. Ron Plotnikoff and colleagues sent weekly
e-mail reminders to some volunteers at five large Canadian
workplaces who were taking part in a larger study about
exercise and health. More than 1,600 completed the full
study.
Writing in the American Journal of Health Promotion, Plotnikoff
said those who received the e-mail reminders exercised more
and knew more about the benefits than those who did not.
They also reduced their mean body mass index, or BMI, a
measure of body fat based on height and weight.
Those who did not get the e-mails actually gained some
weight over the three-month study.