According to the study by Seasonal Berries, over a third of Britons have
succumbed to the daily afternoon hunger slump and admit they have
already broken healthy diets that they started at the beginning of the
year, the Daily Star reported.
Crisps, biscuits, cake and chocolate were named as the biggest downfalls, with half of Britons saying afternoon snacking was the main reason they break their New Year diets.
But it's not just the time of day that brings on the hunger pangs, as more than half of those questioned blamed other people for their diet failures.
Over a third blamed their partner and one in ten blame colleagues for "forcing" unhealthy snacks on them in the workplace.
Although both sexes are prone to giving in to temptation, men actually seem to have more willpower, with 69 percent sticking to their diet for one month, compared to 63 percent of women.
Over a quarter attributed lack of flavour in their healthy meals as the reason they craved salty, sugary snacks and others said seeing other people pigging out made it harder to curb the cravings.
Crisps, biscuits, cake and chocolate were named as the biggest downfalls, with half of Britons saying afternoon snacking was the main reason they break their New Year diets.
But it's not just the time of day that brings on the hunger pangs, as more than half of those questioned blamed other people for their diet failures.
Over a third blamed their partner and one in ten blame colleagues for "forcing" unhealthy snacks on them in the workplace.
Although both sexes are prone to giving in to temptation, men actually seem to have more willpower, with 69 percent sticking to their diet for one month, compared to 63 percent of women.
Over a quarter attributed lack of flavour in their healthy meals as the reason they craved salty, sugary snacks and others said seeing other people pigging out made it harder to curb the cravings.
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