Scientists have proven that drinking tea can help people lose
weight.
During a five-year study, researchers discovered five new genes
related to obesity, which point to the cause of the condition.
However they also found that the polyphenol compound in tea -
especially Oolong tea - can help obese people battle the bulge.
The focus of the study was to help address growing obesity among
Chinese children, especially in cities.
The groundbreaking research reveals that overeating is not the
only cause.
"Diet and lifestyle are only the external reasons," said Guo
Xirong, director of the Nanjing Institute for Pediatrics affiliated
to Nanjing Medical College. "The genetic conditions of the
individuals could predispose, or even cause, children and
adolescents to become overweight."
Guo won the Soong Ching Ling Foundation Pediatrics Award last
week for his pioneering research in identifying the new genes
related to obesity and suggesting new intervention strategies.
Despite their findings, Guo admits there is no magic bullet for
treating childhood obesity. But he said a healthier diet and
lifestyle will help.
According to Guo, the seeds of obesity can be planted in
children much earlier than generally believed.
When children are still in the fetus, they tend to become obese
later in life if pregnant mothers eat too much and have a dramatic
increase in weight.
Compared to bottle-fed infants, babies who are breastfed are
less likely to become obese later in their life because the
secretion of breast milk is limited. Bottle-fed babies tend to
develop a larger appetite because they are fed each time they
cry.
Chinese have long believed in the link between tea drinking and
weight loss but many health authorities in the West have been
skeptical about it.
Guo particularly recommends Oolong tea, one of the lesser-known
teas in the West. Of the total amount of tea produced and consumed
in the world, 78 percent is black, 20 percent is green, and less
then 2 percent is Oolong tea.
Black tea is consumed primarily in Western countries, the Middle
East and South Asia whereas green tea is drunk primarily in China,
Japan and a few countries in North Africa.
The production and consumption of Oolong tea are primarily
confined to southeastern China.
(China Daily June 8, 2007)