Remarriage Makes Men Gain Weight
Men who remarry appear to put their feet up -
tending to do less exercise and putting on weight, researchers
have found.
The Harvard School of Public Health study suggested
their weight gain may be due to marriage improving men's 'bachelor'
eating habits.
But the marital demands on their time appear
to prevent them making it to the gym to work off the calories.
The study is published in the Journal of Epidemiology
and Community Health.
It followed over 38,000 men aged between 40 and 75 between 1986
and 1994.
All the men were healthcare professionals taking
part in a long term study into chronic illness.
The men were asked about their marital status
at least twice during this period.
They were also asked to complete detailed questionnaires
about their dietary and exercise habits, and how much they smoke
and drank.
The study did not look at how marital status
affected women's health.
Unhealthy divorcees
It was found that remarriage did appear to improve
men's diets.
They reduced their alcohol intake, ate more vegetables
and lean poultry and had fewer sugary drinks than peers who were
divorced or bereaved.
The dietary benefits were greater for younger
men who remarried after the loss of a spouse.
But, in contrast to the positive change in eating
habits, men who remarried did appear to exercise less, and to
gain weight.
When the researchers studied the health of widowers
they found that, compared to those who stayed married over a four-year
period, they drank more and ate far fewer vegetables.
Divorced men lost weight, but also smoke and
drank more than other groups.
Writing in the Journal of Epidemiology and Community
Health, the research team led by Dr Patricia Mona Eng, said: "Remarriage
was not linked to an increase in activity levels.
"Instead, formerly solitary men experienced relative
decline along with weight gain upon remarrying."
They speculate: "Time demands of a new spousal
role may preclude routine exercise.
"Married life may also bring regularity to meal
patterns and increased food intake via social facilitation."
Professor Ben Fletcher, of the British Psychological
Society, said: "The men who remarry are likely to become more
sedentary, and there's an increase in social support - which can
have a powerful effect on health and well-being."
Professor Fletcher, head of psychology at the
University of Hertfordshire, added that there were other studies
showing men coped less well with losing a partner.
"With men, unlike women, you do see an increase
in mortality risk in the six months after a bereavement."
Reference
Source 108
Dec 14, 2004
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