Bad news for chocolate lovers

Chocolate lovers 'are more depressive', say experts

People who regularly eat chocolate are more depressive, experts have found.

Research in Archives of Internal Medicine shows those who eat at least a bar every week are more glum than those who only eat chocolate now and again.

Many believe chocolate has the power to lift mood, and the US team say this may be true, although scientific proof for this is lacking. 

But they say they cannot rule out that chocolate may be a cause rather than the cure for being depressed. In the study, which included nearly 1,000 adults, the more chocolate the men and women consumed the lower their mood. 

Those who ate the most - more than six regular 28g size bars a month - scored the highest on depression, using a recognised scale. 

None of the men and women were on antidepressants or had been diagnosed as clinically depressed by a doctor. 

'Mood food' 

Dr Natalie Rose and her colleagues from the University of California, San Diego, say there are many possible explanations for their findings, and that these need to be explored. 

It may simply be that people who are depressed crave chocolate as a "self-treatment" to lift mood, or depression may drive the craving without any beneficial effect. 

"Alternatively, analogous with alcohol, there could be short-term benefits of chocolate to mood with longer-term untoward effects," they told the journal. 

Chocolate could even be a direct cause of depression, the researchers added. 

Bridget O'Connell, of the mental health charity Mind, said: "The way we feel and what we eat can be closely related, and many people will be familiar with craving particular foods or comfort eating when they are stressed, under pressure or depressed. 

"However, as this study shows, more research is needed to determine exactly what the relationship between chocolate and our mood is."  


Vocabulary:

a bar (of chocolate) -

glum (adj) -

now and again -

to lift (your mood) -

to lack -

to rule out -

rather than -

to score -

findings -

to crave -

short-term -


Do you keep up-to-date with news regarding what food and drink is healthy or otherwise?

Are you sometimes worried about what you read? Do you try to change your diet because of what you read?

Here are a couple more articles advising what is good and bad:

White wines bad for teeth Source: BBC news

Pick the right veg for health Source: BBC news


Comments

Unknown said…
I guess if you eat whatever to improve your health or your mood, it could mean you know there is a problem with health or mood!
Graham said…
Hey Andr�s!

Good to know that you have had a look at the blog :-)

Look through the archives to see things that interest you.

and leave more comments, of course.
Lola Martin said…
Hi Teacher!

I´ve read this article, and I think it´s very interesting and I realized that I don´t know very much about healthy food, although I try to eat hatlthily.

Sewe you on Monday,
Lola
Graham said…
Hi Lola

I often think that the lack of fish in my diet contributes to my poor memory.

However, like you, I try my best to keep to a healthy diet.
Marta said…
From time to time I read some magazines about running and they published many articles about food and ideal diets for sport people. I think you don't have to believe that everything is right for you but there're some useful tips. For example, if you usually run, you should eat fruits like bananas to recover the level of potassium in your body.
But I have never followed a diet and even less, one published in a magazine.
What that study tells about chocolate is terrible: I'm an addicted!