Health
Daily yogurt no guarantee for good health: Study
London, April 22
If you are taking yogurt
daily in the hope that it would help you lose weight and strengthen your
bones, you could well be putting your efforts in the wrong place.
A
study involving more than 4,000 people has found no link between the
regular intake of yogurt and improvement in physical health.
"The
regular consumption of yogurt is not linked to health-related quality
of life," said lead author Esther Lopez-Garcia from Autonomous
University of Madrid, Spain.
The study carried out in Spain
evaluated whether there is a link between the regular consumption of
yogurt and the physical and mental improvement in health-related quality
of life (HRQL).
The three-and-half-year-long study involved 4,445 Spanish adults.
"In
comparison with people who did not eat yogurt, those who ate this dairy
product regularly did not display any significant improvement in their
score on the physical component of quality of life and although there
was a slight improvement mentally, this was not statistically
significant," Lopez-Garcia noted.
Until now, several research
papers have suggested that the consumption of yogurt could influence
HRQL either directly or indirectly.
For the experts, one of the
reasons may be because it is rich in calcium, protecting the bones and
which could help to combat osteomuscular illnesses -- one of the
conditions with greatest negative impact on the quality of life.
Also, more specifically, its intake has been associated with lesser weight increase and a lower rate of cardiovascular diseases.
The new study was published in the Journal of the Academy of Nutrition and Dietetics.