Scottish Daily Mail

Why women piled on more lockdown pounds than men

- By Shaun Wooller Health Correspond­ent

WITH curbs on our ability to get out and about freely, we all feared piling on the pounds during lockdown.

But it seems you had more chance of putting on weight if you were a woman.

Experts say they were still more likely to bear the brunt of childcare – and were therefore stuck indoors more looking after the family.

Men, on the other hand, generally ‘carried on as they were’.

Researcher­s analysed data on 938,000 British adults and found Covid curbs had a ‘differenti­al impact’ on the sexes.

Women were 44 per cent more likely to go from overweight to obese, with 13 per cent of women doing so compared with just 9 per cent of men.

Professor Thomas Yates, who worked on the University of Leicester study, suggested that many mothers were relied upon to take care of home schooling and were less able to go out and keep active.

He added: ‘I suspect lockdown had a differenti­al impact on many women’s lives compared to men.

‘Men pretty much carried on as they were – they just worked from home instead. Meanwhile those school runs, supermarke­t shops, those types of things that are potentiall­y getting women out of the house more often – they suddenly stopped.

‘And then you have to deal with home schooling kids and just a very different way of living, which was probably quite stressful.

‘So not only was it reducing activity levels and changing diets, it was stress and mental health problems probably playing into that as well. ’Asked why men fared better, Professor Yates said: ‘I suspect it is more because men are probably quite good at carrying on pretty much as they were.

‘Obviously you had things like the pub taken away, but in terms of work patterns, I would have thought there was less disruption.’

The analysis, presented at the European Congress on Obesity in Maastricht, the Netherland­s, also revealed younger Britons were more than twice as likely as pensioners to get fatter during the pandemic.

Some 17 per cent of under-45s went from overweight to obese compared with 7 per cent of over-75s.

Professor Yates said: ‘All that socialisin­g, all that need to go out of the house – to the gym, to work – was suddenly stopped, so there was a really noticeable difference... We know from children and young people, anxiety, stress, depression… the pandemic had a marked effect on people’s mental health.

‘So if you combine a pandemic of mental health with lockdown, you’re going to get people eating more, exercising less and gaining weight, so that’s probably what we’re seeing in that group.’

Professor Yates added that weight gain in young adults and women could lead to a higher risk of conditions such as diabetes, heart disease and cancer over the coming decades. He called on more action ‘to reverse the effects of lockdown’.

Dr David Kloecker, also from the University of Leicester, said: ‘Prolonged periods of lockdown disrupted daily routines making it challengin­g for people to eat healthily and keep fit. Neverthele­ss, more research is needed to understand the reasons behind these changes in body weight and obesity levels.’

‘They bore brunt of home schooling’

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