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Science suggests that, in general, straight men not only prefer women with wider hips and smaller waists, but also women with a low-to-medium BMI (body mass index). A 2020 study published in the ...
Men with an extra 11cm on their waistlines by the end of the study increased their risk of developing cancer by 25 per cent. By comparison, an increase in BMI of 3.7 - for example, rising from 24 ...
Waist circumference is a stronger predictor of obesity-related cancer risk than BMI in men, but not in women, due to ...
A new study has found that over 1 in 5 boys and men in Canada and the United States may meet the diagnostic criteria for an eating disorder, highlighting the urgent need for greater awareness, ...
A new study from Lund University in Malmö, Sweden, revealed that waist circumference is a stronger risk indicator for obesity-related cancers in men than Body Mass Index (BMI). The research ...