An enormous international study just confirmed the ugly truth about sitting too much
https://www.sciencealert.com/around-the-...d-too-much
EXCERPT: . . . Now, a study by an international team of researchers involving more than 100,000 individuals across 21 countries has revealed people in poorer parts of the world suffer even worse effects from long days perched in one position.
While greater amounts of sitting were associated with an increased risk of mortality and cardiovascular disease in all of the populations studied, the relationship was more pronounced in low income nations like Bangladesh, India, and Zimbabwe.
Sitting for six to eight hours a day – be it at work, in a car, or in front of the television at night before heading off to bed – increases the relative risk of heart disease and premature death by around 12 to 13 percent, compared to people who sit less than four hours per day.
Bump that time up to eight hours or more, and the relative risk lurches to an astonishing 20 percent.
When the data are separated into different economic categories, sitting for more than eight hours a day in low-income and lower-middle-income countries risks a jump in death and heart disease of just under 30 percent (again, relative to sitting four hours or less).
On one hand, the study shows just how widespread the problem of reduced physical activity is. But a more serious implication is the role poverty plays in determining the ultimate impact every extra hour of sitting has on the body... (MORE - details)
An Emotional Sign Of Vitamin B12 Deficiency
https://www.spring.org.uk/2022/06/12-defi-c.php
INTRO: Feeling depressed can be a sign of vitamin B12 deficiency, a study suggests. Typical symptoms of depression, along with low mood, include difficulty concentrating and low energy and motivation.
Researchers have found that supplementation with vitamin B12 can help reduce depression symptoms. Both vitamin B12 and folate are vital to the production of critical neurotransmitters, such as serotonin and noradrenaline.
Depression is often linked to low levels of serotonin in the brain. One study has found that those with low levels of vitamin B12 are at triple the risk of developing melancholic depression... (MORE - details)
https://www.sciencealert.com/around-the-...d-too-much
EXCERPT: . . . Now, a study by an international team of researchers involving more than 100,000 individuals across 21 countries has revealed people in poorer parts of the world suffer even worse effects from long days perched in one position.
While greater amounts of sitting were associated with an increased risk of mortality and cardiovascular disease in all of the populations studied, the relationship was more pronounced in low income nations like Bangladesh, India, and Zimbabwe.
Sitting for six to eight hours a day – be it at work, in a car, or in front of the television at night before heading off to bed – increases the relative risk of heart disease and premature death by around 12 to 13 percent, compared to people who sit less than four hours per day.
Bump that time up to eight hours or more, and the relative risk lurches to an astonishing 20 percent.
When the data are separated into different economic categories, sitting for more than eight hours a day in low-income and lower-middle-income countries risks a jump in death and heart disease of just under 30 percent (again, relative to sitting four hours or less).
On one hand, the study shows just how widespread the problem of reduced physical activity is. But a more serious implication is the role poverty plays in determining the ultimate impact every extra hour of sitting has on the body... (MORE - details)
An Emotional Sign Of Vitamin B12 Deficiency
https://www.spring.org.uk/2022/06/12-defi-c.php
INTRO: Feeling depressed can be a sign of vitamin B12 deficiency, a study suggests. Typical symptoms of depression, along with low mood, include difficulty concentrating and low energy and motivation.
Researchers have found that supplementation with vitamin B12 can help reduce depression symptoms. Both vitamin B12 and folate are vital to the production of critical neurotransmitters, such as serotonin and noradrenaline.
Depression is often linked to low levels of serotonin in the brain. One study has found that those with low levels of vitamin B12 are at triple the risk of developing melancholic depression... (MORE - details)