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UCLA study suggests supportive marriages may help people stay at a healthier weight

Emotionally supportive marriages may influence weight by shaping brain and gut responses, offering a new angle on how relationships affect health.

Updated on: Dec 09, 2025 12:10 pm IST
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Researchers at UCLA say the real health advantage in marriage isn’t the ring - it is the emotional support inside the relationship. Married people who feel genuinely understood by their partners tend to weigh less than those who do not, with supported spouses showing BMIs roughly five points lower. It is not a small gap. And the team behind the work believes this has more to do with biology than willpower.

Study finds caring marriages may support healthier weight(Unsplash)

The study, published in Gut Microbes, suggests that supportive marriages may help raise oxytocin levels - the bonding hormone - which then influences how the brain responds to food and how the gut handles nutrients. It edges the science toward a clearer picture: the emotional climate at home may steer appetite and metabolism more than anyone realised.

What emotional support changes - and what it does not

As per StudyFinds, Past research on marriage and weight has been messy, flipping between “marriage makes you healthier” and “marriage makes you gain weight.” The UCLA team tried to cut through the noise by looking beyond marital status and focusing on what people actually feel inside the relationship.

The gut readout was not framed as a magic fix, but Study Finds writes that people with strong emotional support showed more protective metabolites and fewer of the inflammatory ones. That balance may help regulate appetite and energy use.

Oxytocin sits somewhere in the middle of this communication system, helping the brain and gut “talk” to each other. Married participants tended to show higher oxytocin levels, though not enough for statistical certainty. Still, the broader pattern held: better support, steadier biology.

What it means for the average person

The study had limits - mostly younger adults, mostly from one region, and it captured a single moment in time rather than long-term change. But the takeaway is simple enough. Emotional support matters. Feeling understood, comforted, and backed by a partner may chip away at stress-eating, calm the body’s reward circuits, and shape the gut in ways that help control weight.

Obesity affects more than 40 percent of American adults. Diet and exercise still matter. But Study Finds notes that the emotional tone of a relationship may deserve a seat at the table too.

Note to readers: This article is for informational purposes only and not a substitute for professional medical advice. Always seek the advice of your doctor with any questions about a medical condition.

 
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Catch your daily dose of Fashion, Taylor Swift, Health, Festivals, Travel, Relationship, Recipe and all the other Latest Lifestyle News on Hindustan Times Website and APPs.
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