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Dr. Rebecca Lee looks at the obesogenic environment -- an environment that leads people to become obese -- and shares practical ideas to help you start making important changes in your own community. Lee is also an associate professor in the department of health and human performance at the University of Houston and holds a courtesy appointment at the University of Texas School of Public Health. Lee serves on the editorial boards of the International Journal of Women’s Health, the American ...
Dr. Rebecca Lee looks at the obesogenic environment -- an environment that leads people to become obese -- and shares practical ideas to help you start making important changes in your own community. Lee serves on the editorial boards of the International Journal of Women’s Health, the American Journal of Health Promotion, and Health Psychology. These webinars help fitness centers, worksites, senior residences, community health programs, hospitals, and universities empower people to change ...
Accessibility is a factor in determining whether people use physical activity resources and ultimately in whether they do physical activity. Similar results were found in women: Women who lived near more physical activity resources and parks were more physically active than those who lived near fewer physical activity resources and parks (Jilcott et al. Factors related to the accessibility of physical activity resources, along with physical activity resource features, amenities, incivilities...
If the obesogenic genetic risk profile has remained the same in humans since the obesity epidemic began, what has changed? Numerous genetic factors may contribute to an obesogenic genetic risk profile, but this profile is only an indicator of the potential for someone to gain excess weight under obesogenic conditions. The simple answer is that our environment has changed; the complexity lies in determining the aspects of our environment that have changed to make it obesogenic and how we can...
Recent research suggests that children are now watching more television than ever with black and Latino children watching more television than white children (Dennison, Erb, & Jenkins, 2002; Viner & Cole, 2005). Another alarming finding suggested that children from families who watch television during meals eat more meat, pizza, salty snacks, and soda than children who do not watch television during family meals (Coon, Goldberg, Rogers, & Tucker, 2001). Researchers continue to report that ...
Cold water immersion had a greater effect compared with passive recovery, active recovery, and massage on recovery between exercise bouts, resulting in enhanced subsequent performance (Lane and Wenger 2004). Although research investigating contrast water therapy as a recovery intervention for muscle soreness and exercise-induced fatigue is limited in comparison to that for cold water immersion, several researchers have proposed possible mechanisms that may support the use of contrast water ...