The belief that a diet of six small meals, over three square ones, help you stay in shape is fast gaining ground.
Sugar, no rush: Eating small amounts of food at regular intervals throughout the day helps maintain your blood sugar level at an even balance so you don’t get hungry as often. Also eating less at every meal, but eating at frequent intervals keeps hunger pangs at bay because your stomach is never empty.
Energy boost: Small but frequent meals better regulate your body’s insulin, which helps the body convert food to energy and store it. Eating every four hours or so should keep you energized longer. Eating several small meals spaced out over an entire day can keep your metabolism level high so that you’re constantly burning calories.
Improved digestion: Your stomach needs time to digest food, so if you eat a large meal, it will take longer to digest. Your body digests smaller meals more quickly, which will make you feel more energetic and less lazy.
You must know how to make mini-meals work for you. The key is to make each meal half its size but powered with nutrition. The small but filling breakfast, healthy mid-morning snack, portioned lunch and dinner and two mid-afternoon and evening snacks should be of equivalent or less calorie count than what you were consuming over three major meals.
BMI is a measurement of a person's leanness or corpulence based on their height and weight, and is intended to quantify tissue mass. It is widely used as a general indicator of whether a person has a healthy body weight for their height.
A few more kgs can lessen your chances of thinning bones and a weakened immune system, as well as feeling tired.
You're in a good place now. Keep up your regular healthy habits to maintain your weight.
Since your weight puts you in the overweight range, losing some extra kgs is a good first step toward lowering your chances of health problems.
Since your weight puts you in the obese range, you're much more likely to have serious health problems.
Underweight = < 18.5
Normal weight = 18.5 – 24.9
Overweight = 25 – 29.9
Obesity = BMI of 30 or greater
Belly fat affects your health more than fat in your arms or your hips. It's linked to a higher risk of heart attacks, strokes, and diabetes, and it puts you at risk for other diseases, too.
A few more kgs can lessen your chances of thinning bones and a weakened immune system, as well as feeling tired.
You're in a good place now. Keep up your regular healthy habits to maintain your weight.
Belly fat affects your health more than fat in your arms or your hips. It's linked to a higher risk of heart attacks, strokes, and diabetes, and it puts you at risk for other diseases, too.
Belly fat affects your health more than fat in your arms or your hips. It's linked to a higher risk of heart attacks, strokes, and diabetes, and it puts you at risk for other diseases, too.
Underweight = < 0.43
Normal weight = 0.43 – 0.52
Overweight = 0.53 – 0.65
Obesity = 0.65 or greater