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Intermittent Fasting: Fad Or Fab?
PRIME Magazine
|December 2018 - January 2019
Fasting, the abstention from food or drink or both for short or lengthy duration, complete or partial, or intermittent, has been promoted and practiced by different religions, cultures and physicians for centuries. More recently, fasting has gained wider, mainstream recognition for its weight loss and health improvement potential.
This knowledge is providing us with a better understanding of how small changes to our eating habits and lifestyle choices may lead to greater wellness.
HISTORICAL CONTEXT OF FASTING
For centuries fasting has been a common practise in many different religious beliefs and cultures such as Islam, Christianity, Judaism, Hinduism, Jainism, Buddhism, Ayurveda, and others, where it’s undertaken as a form of penance or penitence, mourning, protest, or a purification of body and mind. Fasting can take on many forms.
For example, during Ramadan Muslims refrain from eating and drinking during the period of daybreak and ending at sunset; Christians practise fasting during Lent and Advent; Judaism practises fasting over Yom Kippur; the system of Ayurveda promotes fasting as a means of maintaining and regaining health - whereby eating food that is cleaner, lighter and appropriate for the current state of health; Mahatma Gandhi conducted fasts as a means of objection against government injustices; the Greek physician Hippocrates (5th century BCE) recommended fasting to patients suffering from certain diseases, the belief being that since there is appetite loss during certain illnesses, abstention from food may be a natural part of the recovery process.
HEALTH BENEFITS
The health benefits of fasting started to become more widely recognised during the 1990’s and since then, ongoing research into intermittent fasting and calorie restriction show both as having the potential to offer some protection from diseases including diabetes, obesity and epilepsy, and thus extending life.
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