The associations between chronotype, a healthy diet and obesity

Jun 2, 2016Chronobiology international

How Sleep Timing, Healthy Eating, and Obesity Are Linked

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Abstract

Among 4421 subjects aged 25-74 years, evening types showed lower adherence to a healthy diet, but this did not correlate with obesity measures.

  • Evening chronotypes had poorer health behaviors, including higher smoking rates and lower physical activity.
  • No significant mediation effect of a healthy diet on the relationship between chronotype and obesity was observed.
  • Chronotype did not modify the association between adherence to a healthy diet and obesity measures.
  • Evening types reported lower perceived health compared to morning types.

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