July 25, 2013  by Solaade Ayo-Aderele  
 | credits: keepyourdietreal.com
Many
 people view breakfast as a bore; while some think it’s a mark of 
endurance to forgo the first meal of the day. It’s not unusual to hear 
such people inform those who care to listen that they’ve not eaten 
anything all day.
Bad as it is, when breakfast skippers 
finally decide to eat their first meal, the tendency is for them to 
overreach themselves by combining two meals, thus eating more than 
necessary at one sitting.
Indeed, experts say one in four people 
skip breakfast during the week; while at least one in six adults don’t 
even bother to eat breakfast.
Yet, if you are fond of skipping breakfasts, researchers have bad news for you, especially if you are male.
A team of American researchers submit 
that “men who skip breakfast may face a higher risk of heart attack or 
deadly heart disease.”
In a study of nearly 27,000 men, the 
scientists discovered that those who failed to eat in the morning had a 
27 per cent higher risk of heart attack or death from coronary heart 
disease than those who did.
The subjects, ranging in age from 45 to 82, took part in a survey about food that tracked health outcomes from 1992 to 2008.
The researchers note that those who 
skipped breakfast tended to be young and were “more likely to be 
smokers, employed full time, unmarried, less physically active and drank
 more alcohol.”
Lead study author and a researcher at 
the Harvard School of Public Health, Dr. Leah Cahill, contends that, 
“Skipping breakfast may lead to one or more risk factors, including 
obesity, high blood pressure, high cholesterol and diabetes, which may 
in turn lead to a heart attack over time.”
According to the researchers, the men 
who said they ate breakfast also appeared to eat one more time per day 
than those who did not, suggesting that those who skipped breakfast did 
not make up for the lack of food later.
Another researcher with the MRC Clinical
 Science Centre at Imperial College, London, Dr. Tony Goldstone, found 
that skipping breakfast not only leads to larger meals later in the day,
 but it also contributes to cravings and a greater willingness to eat 
unhealthy food.
Goldstone enthuses that by skipping 
breakfast, you become vulnerable to being more tempted to eat unhealthy,
 high-calorie foods.  Eating a good breakfast, he counsels, will save 
you from craving the forbidden.
Scientists at Johns Hopkins Bloomberg 
School of Public Health, USA, support this. They note that generally, 
hunger sets in long before it’s time for lunch. However, because the 
time may not be convenient to eat properly, many people who have not 
eaten breakfast take to snacking on fatty and sugary foods, which are 
likely to contribute to weight gain.
Clinical Biochemist and Products Manager
 (Diagnostics), New Heights Pharma, Mr. Olayinka Ebenezer, explains that
 eating breakfast may not only prevent possible heart attack, but it 
also has many advantages for men, women and children.
A nutritionist, Dr. Wande Brown, notes 
that when you take nothing for breakfast, you have the tendency to 
underperform on short-term memory tests, compared to those who have had 
their first meal.
Ebenezer explains that our brains need 
fuel to work properly, but it is good food that works like fuel in the 
human body. Thus, when you eat good meal in the morning, it gets you 
ready for the day.
He notes, “The longer you go without 
eating, the more your body starts to slow and wind down. As time goes 
on, your thoughts, speech and reaction time begin to sputter until it 
comes to a standstill.”
For growing children, paediatricians say
 kids and teenagers that eat breakfast have more energy, do better in 
school, and eat healthier throughout the day. “Without breakfast, people
 can get irritable, restless, and tired,” family doctor, Tolani George, 
counsels.
Moreover, the Johns Hopkins scientists 
note that, among children of school age, breakfast provides the energy 
and nutrients that lead to increased concentration in the classroom.
They fear that people who skip breakfast
 are unlikely to make up their daily requirement for some vitamins and 
minerals, which a simple breakfast would have provided.
All the experts agree that breakfast 
provides energy for necessary activities during the morning and 
therefore helps to prevent mid-morning slump, which the absence of a 
breakfast would have caused.
In terms of weight control, 
nutritionists say contrary to what dieters might think, skipping 
breakfast will counter all their efforts at maintaining a healthy 
weight, and lead to the exact opposite of what they are aiming at.
Indeed, experts argue that breakfast 
keeps the metabolism running higher because skipping meals causes the 
body to kick into ‘starvation’ mode. Consequently, scientists say, you 
are more likely to overcompensate for the loss of calories at breakfast 
by eating more high-fat foods later in the day.
A study that focused on people ages 12 
and up, presented at the Experimental Biology Conference in Orlando, 
Florida, found that what you eat for breakfast may play a more 
significant role in weight maintenance than your total calorie intake.
The lead researcher/Professor of 
Nutritional Epidemiology at the University of California at Berkeley, 
Dr. Gladys Block, advises that high-fibre, low fat breakfasts promote 
maintenance of healthy body weight and therefore should be preferred.
The scientists are unanimous in their 
conclusion: “Don’t skip breakfast, because eating breakfast is 
associated with a decreased risk of heart attack.”
 
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