IE 11 is not supported. For an optimal experience visit our site on another browser.

Being popular on Facebook will make you fat

By Yelena Moroz, Men’s HealthResearchers surveyed 470 people about their Internet and Facebook use, plus their health and financial behaviors offline. The results: Frequent users with strong friend ties had an approximate BMI of 26, while infrequent Facebookers had an approximate BMI of 24. (A BMI of 18.5 to 24.9 is considered healthy.) High use was also linked to an increase in binge eating. (I
Getty Images / Today

By Yelena Moroz, Men’s Health

Researchers surveyed 470 people about their Internet and Facebook use, plus their health and financial behaviors offline. The results: Frequent users with strong friend ties had an approximate BMI of 26, while infrequent Facebookers had an approximate BMI of 24. (A BMI of 18.5 to 24.9 is considered healthy.) High use was also linked to an increase in binge eating. (In the time it took to update your status, you could have done one of these 10-Second Health Checkups.)

Researchers also randomly assigned 84 Facebook users to read their news feed or to browse a news website for 5 minutes. After the task, all subjects had to choose between a cookie and a granola bar. While those who read the news didn't show an increase in self-esteem--sorry, Anderson--only 30 percent of readers chose the unhealthy option, compared to the 80 percent of Facebook users who reached for cookies (but had higher self-esteem).

What gives? "People use momentary increases in self-esteem as a license to indulge," study author Keith Wilcox, Ph.D., an assistant professor of marketing at Columbia University, tells MensHealth.com. "The key here is that [the study participant] did not actually do anything to merit a treat."

If the possibility of gaining a few extra pounds isn't enough to curb your hunger for Facebook, the study also showed that the inverse relationship between high self-esteem and self-control plays a role in your finances. Frequent Facebook users who focused on close friends had about $1,000 more credit card debt than infrequent users. (Reduce your debt and learn these 4 Rules to Build Your Wealth.)

Relax--you don't need to go completely off the grid to stay in control. "To overcome this potential issue, recognize that while social networks make you feel better about yourself, it's not the same thing as actually feeling good about yourself because you did something, like worked out," Wilcox says. "A bit of self-awareness can help you avoid engaging in this behavior. Facebook is not the problem. It's the feeling of entitlement that's the problem."

Don't freak out if you manage your company's Facebook or Twitter account. Interacting with weaker ties, such as acquaintances, has less influence. Plus, you're projecting the image of the company, not yourself.

More from Men's Health: 

The Spartacus Workout—On DVD!

The Most Socially Networked Cities in America

Why You Shouldn’t Have More Than 354 Facebook Friends

What Your Facebook Friends Say about You