Thursday, September 5, 2013
Exercising has many benefits. For instance, persons with heart problems need to exercise for proper circulation of blood. Some relieve muscle tensions by doing exercise. But we tend to skip the idea that exercise makes our bone strong and help withstand the rigors of our everyday activity. A simple walk on the stairs can already strengthen the lower extremity bones including the joints of the hips, knees and feet. So, whatever roles we have in our lives, let's exercise and be fit....even if we're busy...simple stretching will do. For a simple exercise for bones visit http://www.abc.net.au/radionational/programs/healthreport/exercise-and-bones/3606714.
Monday, September 2, 2013
5 Benefits of Stretching
Although it is hotly debated whether or not stretching helps prevent injury, the other benefits of stretching are numerous and factual. Heavily utilized in pilates and yoga, stretching is widely supported today as a vital part of fitness. With the ability to reduce stress, ease lower back pain, increase flexibility and more, stretching should become a part of everyone's exercise routine.
1. Increased Circulation
While it is widely debated whether or not stretching prevents injury, it has been proven to increase circulation. Although stretching does not necessarily directly prevent injury from overuse, it does increase the blood flow and supply of nutrients to muscles and cartilage. This reduces muscle soreness after working out. The less sore your muscles are, the less painful it will be to work the same muscles and to exercise in general, and the more comfortable your day-to-day life will be.
2. Flexibility
There are four main measures of overall fitness: aerobic, muscular, body composition and flexibility. The main way to increase your flexibility is by stretching.
As you age, your muscles gradually become shorter and tighter, reducing your overall flexibility. This restriction makes you more susceptible to muscle, tendon and joint injuries. Stretching is primarily responsible for increasing flexibility, and reduces these risks. Increased flexibility also allows you to exercise more easily.
3. Increased Range of Motion
Stretching has been shown to effectively increase range of motion in joints. Better range of motion enables you to keep better balance. Better balance means you are less susceptible to falls and the resulting injuries (of particular importance as you age). Increased range of motion also helps to keep you up and moving.
4. Reduce Stress
Everyone has stress. Everyone is constantly looking for new methods of relief. Like all types of exercise, flexibility exercises like stretching have powerful stress-busting abilities. Stress causes your muscles to contract, becoming tense. This tension can have negative effects on just about every part of your body. Gentle stretching exercises relax tense muscles associated with stress. Also, since stretching is an exercise, it has the same endorphin-boosting effects, improving your mood and the way you feel in general.
5. Alleviate Lower Back Pain
Millions of people struggle with chronic lower back pain. Stretching is an excellent way to strengthen the lower back muscles, alleviating soreness and pain. Since many muscles (quadriceps, hamstrings, lower back muscles and hip flexors) contribute to your posture, stretching these muscles has the ability to greatly reduce or eliminatelower back pain.
The truth of whether or not stretching prevents injury can change from one day to the next, depending on what expert you're consulting. However, the fact still remains that stretching has numerous benefits outside of preventing injury. You can live a more comfortable daily life, increase your flexibility and alleviate stress and pain just by doing a few stretches before, after or separate from your workout.
Source:
http://www.fitday.com/fitness-articles/fitness/stretching/5-benefits-of-stretching.html#b
http://www.fitday.com/fitness-articles/fitness/stretching/5-benefits-of-stretching.html#b
"Physical inactivity is responsible for 6 percent of deaths worldwide and rising"
"Physical inactivity is responsible for 6 percent of deaths worldwide and rising."
Hypertension, heart disease, increase on blood sugar and even negative emotional effects are among the sickness a person can have when there is lack of physical inactivity.
Learn more about physical inactivity here:
http://www.health.govt.nz/your-health/healthy-living/food-and-physical-activity/physical-activity/dangers-inactivity-and-sedentary-behaviour
Sunday, September 1, 2013
Physical Activity: Fourth Leading Risk Factor for Global Mortality
Physical Activity
Physical activity is defined as any bodily movement produced by skeletal muscles that requires energy expenditure. Physical inactivity (lack of physical activity) has been identified as the fourth leading risk factor for global mortality (6% of deaths globally). Moreover, physical inactivity is estimated to be the main cause for approximately 21–25% of breast and colon cancers, 27% of diabetes and approximately 30% of ischaemic heart disease burden.Regular and adequate levels of physical activity in adults:
- reduce the risk of hypertension, coronary heart disease, stroke, diabetes, breast and colon cancer, depression and the risk of falls;
- improve bone and functional health; and
- are a key determinant of energy expenditure, and thus fundamental to energy balance and weight control.
Increasing physical activity is a societal, not just an individual problem. Therefore it demands a population-based, multi-sectoral, multi-disciplinary, and culturally relevant approach.
Source:
http://www.who.int/dietphysicalactivity/pa/en/
Thursday, August 29, 2013
Study shows light exercises help boost memory!
How Exercise Can Help Us Learn
By GRETCHEN REYNOLDS
Over the past decade, in study after study in animals and people, exercise has been shown to improve the ability to learn and remember. But the specifics of that process have remained hazy. Is it better to exercise before you learn something new? What about during? And should the exercise be vigorous or gentle?
Two new studies helpfully tackle those questions, with each reaching the conclusion that the timing and intensity of even a single bout of exercise can definitely affect your ability to remember — though not always beneficially.
To reach that conclusion, scientists conducting the larger and more ambitious of the new studies, published in May in PLoS One, first recruited 81 healthy young women who were native German speakers and randomly divided them into three groups. Each group wore headphones and listened for 30 minutes to lists of paired words, one a common German noun and the other its Polish equivalent. The women were asked to memorize the unfamiliar word.
But they heard the words under quite different circumstances. One group listened after sitting quietly for 30 minutes. A second group rode a stationary bicycle at a gentle pace for 30 minutes and then sat down and donned the headphones. And the third group rode a bicycle at a mild intensity for 30 minutes while wearing the headphones and listening to the new words.
Two days later, the women completed tests of their new vocabulary. Everyone could recall some new words. But the women who had gently ridden a bicycle while hearing the new words — who had exercised lightly during the process of creating new memories —performed best. They had the most robust recall of the new information, significantly better than the group that had sat quietly and better than the group that had exercised before learning. Those women performed only slightly better than the women who had not exercised at all.
That result contrasts tellingly with the findings of another new study of memory formation and exercise, presented in May at the annual meetingof the American College of Sports Medicine in Indianapolis. During this study, 11 female collegians read a dense chapter from a college textbook on two occasions: once while sitting quietly and, on a separate day, while exercising vigorously on an elliptical machine for 30 minutes. Immediately after each session, the students were tested on the material they’d just read. They were then retested the next day.
In this study, exercise did not help the women’s memories, at least in the short term. Their test scores were actually worse on the memory test conducted immediately after they’d exercised while reading compared with their scores taken soon after they’d been sitting quietly and studying.
But the recall gap disappeared the next day, when the women were retested. At that point, there were no differences in their scores, whether they’d vigorously exercised while learning the new material or not.
The message of these studies would seem to be that exercise timing and intensity interact to affect memory formation, said Maren Schmidt-Kassow, a professor at the Institute of Medical Psychology at Goethe University in Frankfurt, Germany, who led the study of gentle bicycling and memory. Exercising during learning was, in her study, significantly more effective than exercising beforehand or not exercising at all.
But that beneficial impact probably depended on the mildness of the workout, she said. Light-intensity exercise will elicit low but noticeable levels of physiological arousal, she said, which, in turn, presumably help to prime the brain for the intake of new information and the encoding of that information into memories.
If the exercise is more vigorous, however, it may overstimulate the body and brain, she said, monopolizing more of the brain’s attentional resources and leaving fewer for the creation of robust memories.
This theory also helps to explain why, in both studies, memory recall was best a day or two after exercise, by which time, Dr. Schmidt-Kassow said, physiological arousal would have dissipated.
Of course, the mysteries of human memory remain, by and large, mysteries. These new studies don’t explain how, for instance, at a molecular level, exercise affects the creation of individual memories. It is likely that, as part of the arousal process, exercise stimulates the release of certain chemicals in the brain that affect memory formation, Dr. Schmidt-Kassow said. But that idea has yet to be proven, although she and many other scientists have applicable studies underway.
For now, though, there is some practical takeaway from the current studies, said Walter Bixby, an associate professor at Elon University in North Carolina, who oversaw the study of vigorous exercise and reading. “If you have an exam” or other activity that involves memorizing and recalling information “in a few hours, you would probably be better off sitting quietly and studying,” he says. “However, if the exam is the next day, it won’t hurt you to study while exercising.” And if your workout is gentle, it could even help.
Source:
http://well.blogs.nytimes.com/2013/08/07/how-exercise-can-help-us-learn/?_r=0
Tuesday, August 27, 2013
Monday, August 26, 2013
Reduce 10% cancer mortality through exercise!
The ability of Physical Activities in moderate
amounts reduces mortality from all causes. The 30-minute per day of
walking or 150 minutes per week reduce 10% cancer mortality and 20%
cardiovascular disease.
To stay fit and healthy, Galaw galaw pag may time.
To stay fit and healthy, Galaw galaw pag may time.
Clear all the fats!
Long is the way and hard but you can always start at Level 1. Start your fitness journey now!
Here's a ticket to fitness and wellness. Give life to your family and friends, join the campaign now!
Please share our page, thank you! www.facebook.com/BeFitKahitBusy
The cycle of healthy living
Start a healthy lifestyle now. Begin with
eating healthy food and doing simple exercises even at work! Be fit
kahit busy, galaw-galaw pag may time!
Join us in our campaign for fitness and wellness. Be Fit Kahit Busy, Galaw Galaw Pag May Time. Please like and share our page!
Source: facebook.com/VegetableJuicing
Join us in our campaign for fitness and wellness. Be Fit Kahit Busy, Galaw Galaw Pag May Time. Please like and share our page!
Source: facebook.com/VegetableJuicing
Sunday, August 25, 2013
STOP Stress! Perk up through simple body movements - even at work!
Photo credit: gvsu.edu
Stress DOES have an impact on cancer: Anxiety switches on a gene that speeds up the spread of the disease
* Study found that stress triggers a 'master switch' gene called ATF3
* This corrupts the immune system, giving cancer an fast-track around body
* Discovery could help develop drugs to dampen the 'stress gene'
Lessen your stress at work - perk up with simple body movements and exercises.
Galaw-galaw din pag may time!
Source:
www.dailymail.co.uk/health/article-2400784/Stress-DOES-impact-cancer-Anxiety-switches-gene-speeds-spread-disease.html
Saturday, August 24, 2013
6 Surprising Moves For Flatter Abs
Fun, almost-effortless ways to tighten your belly without a single sit-up
By Diana Kelly1. Do this 2-second posture check
Make your abs look flatter instantly by changing your posture, suggests Andrea Metcalf, author of Naked Fitness
and fitness expert for Anytime Fitness. "When you’re standing and
waiting in line, drop your tailbone and pull the hip bones up as if
you’re trying to connect your hips to your rib cage. This pulls in and
flattens out the belly. Keep your tailbone slightly tucked under to take
pressure off your lower back while you walk. This also makes your
stomach appear flatter."
2. Belly dance while you brush
Smith likes the belly-dancing hip drop step to work
obliques. To do the move, support yourself on the left leg with the
right leg slightly forward and to the left, balancing on your right toe.
Move your right hip up and then drop it down. Do this hip dance for a
minute on each side while you’re brushing your teeth, on the phone at
your desk, or waiting for food to heat up in the microwave.
3. V-sit while you sit
Reclaim those wasted minutes waiting for your computer to
boot up by using them to do these quick and powerful seated chair
office exercises. "The v-sit is one of the most effective ways to
strengthen your entire midsection," says Smith, and you don’t have to
get on the floor to do it. In fact, this move is easy to do even in a
skirt and heels, and is so subtle no one will know you’re doing it.
1. While sitting, scoot your butt to the front of your chair. Then lean back so that your upper back rests lightly on the seat back. Contract abs and lift your right knee up, then place your foot back down on the floor. Repeat with your left leg, doing 10 reps on each side.
2. Then, sit up straight on the front edge of your chair, engage abs and lean back again to lean upper back against the chair back. Sit up straight again, using your abs. Smith suggests 10 reps of the alternating leg exercises, then 10 reps of the front and back exercise. Once you get strong enough, pull both legs up during the exercises. Then do the movements together—legs come up, lean your upper back to the chair back, then sit up straight, and legs go back down.
1. While sitting, scoot your butt to the front of your chair. Then lean back so that your upper back rests lightly on the seat back. Contract abs and lift your right knee up, then place your foot back down on the floor. Repeat with your left leg, doing 10 reps on each side.
2. Then, sit up straight on the front edge of your chair, engage abs and lean back again to lean upper back against the chair back. Sit up straight again, using your abs. Smith suggests 10 reps of the alternating leg exercises, then 10 reps of the front and back exercise. Once you get strong enough, pull both legs up during the exercises. Then do the movements together—legs come up, lean your upper back to the chair back, then sit up straight, and legs go back down.
4. Pretend there's gum stuck on your chair
If you’re driving or sitting and just waiting at the
doctor’s office, imagine there’s gum or wet paint on the back of your
chair so you have to hold yourself up instead of leaning back, says
Smith. Keep shoulder blades down and back, abdominals lifted, and
picture yourself knitting your rib cage together and in.
5. Stay balanced
Sitting on an exercise ball at your desk may help you
focus and power through your workload. Some studies found that when
balls replaced chairs in classrooms, students had an easier time paying
attention to their teachers and focusing on their schoolwork. When you
sit on or lie across a stability ball, you engage all the muscles in
your core to keep yourself supported. A proper fit will help you work
your way to a toned body with better posture, more-defined abs, and a
healthy spine with less back pain.
Here’s a guide to help you find the perfect ball size for your height:
Under 4'6" / 30-cm (12") ball
4'6" to 5'0" / 45-cm (18") ball
5'1" to 5'7" / 55-cm (22") ball
5'8" to 6'2" / 65-cm (26") ball
Over 6'2" / 75-cm (30") ball
Here’s a guide to help you find the perfect ball size for your height:
Under 4'6" / 30-cm (12") ball
4'6" to 5'0" / 45-cm (18") ball
5'1" to 5'7" / 55-cm (22") ball
5'8" to 6'2" / 65-cm (26") ball
Over 6'2" / 75-cm (30") ball
6. Hoop it up
Hula hoops aren’t just for the playground. Michelle Obama
has been spotted hooping with her daughters, and actress Marisa Tomei
credits it for her strong, sexy 46-year-old physique. Adult-size fitness
hoops ($28.50 canyonhoops.com)
are weighted to ratchet up their belly-flattening power and make them
easier to twirl. Here’s how to do it: Move only your midsection, keeping
upper and lower body stable and rocking hips from side to side or front
to back—not in a circle.
Source:
http://www.prevention.com/fitness/strength-training/6-surprising-moves-flatter-abs/1-do-2-second-posture-check
5 Ab Exercises You Can Do At Work
By
Brion O'Connor
Fitness starts with a solid core. Just ask Bicycle magazine's Selene Yeager. The "Fit Chick" columnist is an American Council on Exercise certified trainer, the author of "Ride Your Way Lean," and incredibly active by most standards. However, like many of us, Yeager also spends considerable time behind a desk. And it's there, working on the computer or talking on the phone with clients and colleagues that we fall into a serious fitness trap: inertia.
"We now spend a full eight hours a day sitting, and that's not good," Yeager said [source: Yeager]. "There's a big body of science developing, and it's kind of depressing, called 'inactivity physiology.'
"That's a huge problem right now. A lot of people think that, in itself, is what's causing so much of the obesity, health and metabolic problems we have," she said. "Say, you go to the gym in the morning, and run for 30 minutes, and then you sit for nine hours. That one burst of activity doesn't undo the damage of such a prolonged stretch of being sedentary."
Avoiding inactivity is especially important for your core. If you sit up straight in your chair, with your feet flat on the floor, you're more likely to engage your abdominal muscles. But if you slouch -- and let your skeletal system support your body weight -- you can go the entire workday without firing up your metabolism. Here are five great ways to get a quick core workout while at work.
One of Yeager's favorite office exercises is the core leg lift, which works the deep abdominal muscles, the quadriceps and the hip flexors. To try it:
"You never want to arch your back," Bowling said. "As soon as your back begins to arch, it means you need to take a break and rest" [source: Bowling].
"Sit-ups and crunches are not something you should be doing," he said [source: Boyle]. "They're probably contributing to more back issues than helping."
Instead, Boyle recommends doing planks, which require holding a static position on your elbows:
Ready to ride your bike? Don't worry -- you're still not leaving your desk.
For LaLanne, core strength set the tone for the rest of the body. Though a tireless advocate of weight training and swimming, LaLanne also was a big believer in isometrics, or using the body's own weight to provide resistance. One of his favorite exercises was the seated bicycle pedal:
According to Bowling, the most important element to doing the Seated Bicycle Pedal safely is to keep your back straight. "Tuck the tailbone to prevent arching," she said [source: Bowling]
You'll need to:
Source:
http://health.howstuffworks.com/wellness/diet-fitness/exercise-at-work/5-ab-exercises-you-can-do-at-work.htm
.
Fitness starts with a solid core. Just ask Bicycle magazine's Selene Yeager. The "Fit Chick" columnist is an American Council on Exercise certified trainer, the author of "Ride Your Way Lean," and incredibly active by most standards. However, like many of us, Yeager also spends considerable time behind a desk. And it's there, working on the computer or talking on the phone with clients and colleagues that we fall into a serious fitness trap: inertia.
"We now spend a full eight hours a day sitting, and that's not good," Yeager said [source: Yeager]. "There's a big body of science developing, and it's kind of depressing, called 'inactivity physiology.'
"That's a huge problem right now. A lot of people think that, in itself, is what's causing so much of the obesity, health and metabolic problems we have," she said. "Say, you go to the gym in the morning, and run for 30 minutes, and then you sit for nine hours. That one burst of activity doesn't undo the damage of such a prolonged stretch of being sedentary."
Avoiding inactivity is especially important for your core. If you sit up straight in your chair, with your feet flat on the floor, you're more likely to engage your abdominal muscles. But if you slouch -- and let your skeletal system support your body weight -- you can go the entire workday without firing up your metabolism. Here are five great ways to get a quick core workout while at work.
1. Core Leg Lift
Office work often resembles Sir Isaac Newton's First Law of Motion: An object at rest will remain at rest until acted upon by an external force. Though her work as a columnist requires her to spend hours at the computer, Yeager employs a number of subtle exercises to keep her muscles, and particularly her abdominals, engaged. "We need those little bursts of activity (throughout the day)," she said [source: Yeager].One of Yeager's favorite office exercises is the core leg lift, which works the deep abdominal muscles, the quadriceps and the hip flexors. To try it:
- Sit up tall in your seat. Contract your abs and lift one foot off the floor about six inches, so the knee comes straight up with the foot directly underneath (maintaining a 90-degree bend in the knee).
- Hold for 10 seconds and slowly lower it while relaxing your abs.
- Repeat with the opposite leg.
- Alternate throughout the exercise.
2. Chair Suitcase
April Bowling, a Level 1 certified coach with USA Triathlon and owner of TriLife Coaching, knows a strong core improves performance in all three disciplines of swimming, cycling and running, in addition to overall fitness. The chair suitcase, she says, targets all the main abdominal muscles except the obliques. You'll need to:- Sit on the edge of the chair seat and lean back until your upper back touches the back of the chair. Tuck your tailbone under, and hold onto the arms of the chair for support.
- Bring your knees up -- with your shins parallel to the floor -- so that your torso and thighs make an "open suitcase."
- Close the "suitcase" by bringing your chest and knees toward one another.
- Open and close for 10 to 20 repetitions, two to three sets.
"You never want to arch your back," Bowling said. "As soon as your back begins to arch, it means you need to take a break and rest" [source: Bowling].
3: The Plank
According to Boston-based strength and conditioning coach Mike Boyle, who has worked with athletes ranging from national collegiate champions to Hollywood celebrities, the key to safe abdominal exercises is minimizing flexion."Sit-ups and crunches are not something you should be doing," he said [source: Boyle]. "They're probably contributing to more back issues than helping."
Instead, Boyle recommends doing planks, which require holding a static position on your elbows:
- On the floor, get into a position where you're on your toes and on your elbows, as if you're going to do a push-up from your elbows.
- Simply hold that position.
- Start with 10 seconds, and then gradually increase duration, being mindful of maintaining good form (primarily a straight back and straight legs).
Ready to ride your bike? Don't worry -- you're still not leaving your desk.
4: Seated Bicycle Pedal
The late, great Jack LaLanne, who passed away in January 2011 at the age of 96, was the original television fitness guru, and he enjoyed simple exercises that got big results. "You've got 640 muscles," LaLanne said in a 2008 interview [source: LaLanne]. "They all need a share of work."For LaLanne, core strength set the tone for the rest of the body. Though a tireless advocate of weight training and swimming, LaLanne also was a big believer in isometrics, or using the body's own weight to provide resistance. One of his favorite exercises was the seated bicycle pedal:
- Sitting in your chair, scoot down to the edge of the seat.
- Support your upper body on the armrests.
- Pretend you're riding a bicycle, bringing each knee near the chest, keeping the abdominal muscles contracted.
- Concentrate on "pedaling" in smooth circles.
According to Bowling, the most important element to doing the Seated Bicycle Pedal safely is to keep your back straight. "Tuck the tailbone to prevent arching," she said [source: Bowling]
5: Desk Russian Twist
To incorporate more of your office furniture, Bowling likes the desk Russian twist, which also targets all the major core muscle groups, but primarily the obliques.You'll need to:
- Sit on your desk with your knees over the edge.
- Lean back to a 45-degree angle, or as far as you can while maintaining a neutral spine (no arch).
- Rotate your torso and touch the desk beside your right hip with both hands.
- Repeat to the left.
- Begin with 8 to 10 repetitions to each side, two to three sets.
Source:
http://health.howstuffworks.com/wellness/diet-fitness/exercise-at-work/5-ab-exercises-you-can-do-at-work.htm
.
Workplace exercises: How to burn calories at work
You may spend your workdays at a desk, but you don't
need to take it sitting down. Make workplace exercises — from fitness
breaks to walking meetings — part of your routine.
If you're doing your best to set aside time for physical activity either before work or after work, good for you — but finding time to exercise can be a challenge for anyone who has a busy schedule. Why not work out while you're at work? Consider 10 ways to make workplace exercises part of your routine.
No. 1: Make the most of your commute
Walk or bike to work. If you ride the bus or the subway, get off a few blocks early or at an earlier stop than usual and walk the rest of the way. If you drive to work, park at the far end of the parking lot — or park in the lot for a nearby building. In your building, take the stairs rather than the elevator.No. 2: Look for opportunities to stand
You'll burn more calories standing than sitting. Stand while talking on the phone. Better yet, try a standing desk — or improvise with a high table or counter. Eat lunch standing up. Trade instant messaging and phone calls for walks to other desks or offices.No. 3: Take fitness breaks
Rather than hanging out in the lounge with coffee or a snack, take a brisk walk or do some gentle stretching. For example, face straight ahead, then lower your chin to your chest. Or, while standing, grab one of your ankles — or your pant leg — and bring it up toward your buttock. Hold each stretch for 15 to 30 seconds.No. 4: Trade your office chair for a fitness ball
Consider trading your desk chair for a firmly inflated fitness or stability ball, as long as you're able to safely balance on the ball. You'll improve your balance and tone your core muscles while sitting at your desk. You can even use the fitness ball for wall squats or other workplace exercises during the day.No. 5: Keep fitness equipment in your work area
Store resistance bands — stretchy cords or tubes that offer weight-like resistance when you pull on them — or small hand weights in a desk drawer or cabinet. Do arm curls between meetings or tasks.No. 6: Get social
Organize a lunchtime walking group. You might be surrounded by people who are ready to lace up their walking shoes — and hold each other accountable for regular exercise. Enjoy the camaraderie, and offer encouragement to one another when the going gets tough.No. 7: Conduct meetings on the go
When it's practical, schedule walking meetings or walking brainstorming sessions. Do laps inside your building or, if the weather cooperates, take your walking meetings outdoors.No. 8: Pick up the pace
If your job involves walking, do it faster. The more you walk and the quicker your pace, the greater the benefits.No. 9: If you travel for work, plan ahead
If you're stuck in an airport waiting for a plane, grab your bags and take a brisk walk. Choose a hotel that has fitness facilities — such as treadmills, weight machines or a pool — or bring your equipment with you. Jump-ropes and resistance bands are easy to sneak into a suitcase. Of course, you can do jumping jacks, crunches and other simple exercises without any equipment at all.No. 10: Try a treadmill desk
If you're ready to take workplace exercise to the next level, consider a more focused walk-and-work approach. If you can safely and comfortably position your work surface above a treadmill — with a computer screen on a stand, a keyboard on a table or a specialized treadmill-ready vertical desk — you might be able to walk while you work. In fact, Mayo Clinic researchers estimate that overweight office workers who replace sitting computer time with walking computer time by two to three hours a day could lose 44 to 66 pounds (20 to 30 kilograms) in a year. The pace doesn't need to be brisk, nor do you need to break a sweat. The faster you walk, however, the more calories you'll burn.Want more ideas for workplace exercises? Schedule a walking meeting to brainstorm ideas with your supervisors or co-workers. Remember, any physical activity counts!
Source:
http://www.mayoclinic.com/health/office-exercise/SM00115
Saturday, August 17, 2013
Sitting all day? Galaw galaw pag may time!
"If people sat three hours less each day it would add two years to their lives.”
– Dr. James Levine, MD, PhD author of "Move a Little Lose a Lot"
Would you like a standing desk?
"In an eight-hour day if someone stands for four of those eight hours, over the course of a year the amount of energy they burn is equivalent to about 30kg of body fat."
Modern office: Will work for food and exercise
THE days of workers being crammed into tiny cubicles and ending up with hunched backs and bad attitudes are coming to an end, as companies clamour to pamper their employees.
More employers are seeing the monetary and morale-boosting benefits of taking care of their 'human capital' to ensure people are working at their maximum and their best talent doesn't go elsewhere.
By ensuring employees are better fed, healthier and more socialised and exercised, we are witnessing the evolution of the modern office.
Free food
Just as families who play together, stay together, so employees who eat together, work together.
Companies are feeding staff on a semi-regular basis in an effort to improve morale.
Australia-wide tech company NetApp said offering a full breakfast menu once a month helps them start the day in an upbeat mood.
"By hosting a regular breakfast at team meetings, employees are given the opportunity to get to know each other on a more personal level, leaving work conversations aside," NetApp spokesman Todd Beck said.
"It also eases employees into the week."
-Flexi time and job sharing
Whether there is 38 or 16 hours in the working week, more organisations are letting people do those hours when it suits them - rather than demanding bums on seats between 9am and 5pm.
This has been driven by technology but also by recent federal law changes giving parents with kids under six the right to ask their boss for flexible working arrangements.
Impact HR Consulting principal Therese Ravell said flexible work arrangements are becoming more popular.
"A lot of full-time employment is being replaced by part-time employment and part of the reason for that is that it offers cover for when people go on leave," she said.
"It started as a way for mums to juggle time, but it is also common for athletes and entrepreneurial types who want to enjoy other parts of their lives."
Telecommuting
Mobile technology and longer commuting times have allowed many employees to work from home or out of the office.
Research from flexible workplace provider Regus Australia estimates 35 per cent spend half their working week outside their main office and many of these employees rely on coffee shops as a key 'third place' for work.
Coffee shops have become so prevalent as second offices that some people can't concentrate without cafe noise.
Earlier this year Coffitivity.com created an app which replicates the ambient noise of a cafe so people's creativity isn't stifled by silence.
Recruitment company Hays director Tim James said working from home is not frowned upon like it used to be.
"In the longer term, companies are realising that offer these arrangements usually means the employees are going to be more loyal,'' he said.
"It allows people to spend more time with their families and work hours that suit them."
-Employee wellness programs
Boxing classes, rock-climbing walls in the office, office bikes and even an office dog that needs to be walked every lunchtime: wellness programs come in all shapes and sizes.
Corporate Olympics events and yoga classes have been around for years, but companies are starting to get smarter with how they spend their cash.
Impact HR Consulting principal Therese Ravell said the best programs look at the needs of their staff first.
"An IT group, for example, has recently started a healthy cooking program where they have a chef come in every month to teach them new ways of cooking healthy food - and then they all get the chance to enjoy the food," she said.
"It is giving them life skills and also creating that community factor when they come together and eat."
Standing desks
Fatter employees with higher cholesterol and blood pressure levels are generally less productive, and companies know it. The solution? Get primitive.
"Historically when we were cavemen we had to sit down to take a break, but now we sit all day and have to stand up to take a break," Southern Cross University exercise physiologist Dr Bill Sukala said "We're going to see a continued trend upward of people adopting standing workstations.
"In an eight-hour day if someone stands for four of those eight hours, over the course of a year the amount of energy they burn is equivalent to about 30kg of body fat."
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Source:
http://www.news.com.au/business/worklife/modern-office-will-work-for-food-and-exercise/story-e6frfm9r-1226699124779
Physical inactivity: the biggest public health problem of the 21st century
- Warm up
Physical inactivity: the biggest public health problem of the 21st century
- Professor Steven N Blair, Department of Exercise Science and Epidemiology/Biostatistics, Arnold School of Public Health, University of South Carolina, South Carolina, USA;sblair@gwm.sc.edu
There is now overwhelming evidence that regular physical activity has important and wide-ranging health benefits. These range from reduced risk of chronic diseases such as heart disease, type 2 diabetes, and some cancers to enhanced function and preservation of function with age. As a member of the geriatric set, I am personally delighted that there is strong emerging evidence that activity delays cognitive decline and is good for brain health as well as having extensive benefits for the rest of the body.
I believe that evidence supports the conclusion that physical inactivity is one of the most important public health problems of the 21st century, and may even be the most important. This is not to deny the relevance of other health issues; and certainly we need to pay much more attention to healthful eating habits, smoking prevention and cessation programmes, and state-of-the art and evidence-based preventive medical care. My overriding concern is that the crucial importance of physical activity is undervalued and underappreciated by many individuals in public health and clinical medicine. Figure 1 presents data that have helped lead me to these conclusions about the importance of inactivity. As I suspect most of you are aware, the attributable fraction is an estimate of the number of deaths in a population that would have been avoided if a specific risk factor had been absent. That is, if all smokers were non-smokers or all inactive persons were getting 30 minutes of walking on at least 5 days of the week. The data in figure 1 are based on follow-up of a large population of women and men in the Aerobics Center Longitudinal Study (ACLS). Attributable fraction estimates depend on the strength of association between an exposure and an outcome, and also on the prevalence of that particular risk factor in the population. Figure 1 shows that low cardiorespiratory fitness accounts for about 16% of all deaths in both women and men in this population, and this is substantially more, with the exception of hypertension in men, than the other risk factors. I ask you to consider how often each of these risk factors is evaluated in a typical medical examination, and how often each risk factor is treated if found to be elevated. I have no data, but I wager that the typical physician is 10–50 times more likely to measure cholesterol, blood pressure, and BMI than to measure fitness. Fitness was measured in the ACLS with a maximal exercise test on a treadmill, so this exposure is based on an objective, laboratory measurement. Of course such an exercise test may not be feasible in many clinical examinations, but physicians and other clinicians could at least take a physical activity history and put physical activity on the patient’s agenda.
Figure 1Attributable fractions (%) for all-cause deaths in 40 842 (3333 deaths) men and 12 943 (491 deaths) women in the Aerobics Center Longitudinal Study. The attributable fractions are adjusted for age and each other item in the figure. *Cardiorespiratory fitness determined by a maximal exercise test on a treadmill.
Another example of the importance of fitness is illustrated in figure 2. In this study we followed 2316 men with documented type 2 diabetes for an average of 15.9 years, during which time 179 of them died of cardiovascular disease (CVD). The data in figure 2 clearly show a strong inverse gradient for CVD death across fitness categories within each BMI category. Note that the obese men who were moderately/highly fit had less than half the risk of dying than the normal-weight men who were unfit. Every day tens of thousands of patients with type 2 diabetes attend a medical evaluation. How many of these patients have their height and weight measured and their BMI calculated, after which they are assigned to either the normal weight, overweight, or obese category? Conversely, how many of these patients have their cardiorespiratory fitness evaluated, or even have a careful and accurate physical activity history obtained? My guess is that if the physician mentions physical activity it may be “I think you should take up some exercise, it will help you lose weight”. This is the wrong message. Of course regular physical activity will help with weight management, but the activity will be very important to the patient’s health, whether or not they lose weight.
As you can tell, I am passionate about the importance of regular physical activity for individuals’ and the public’s health, and think we must focus much more attention on this issue. Therefore I was delighted when Professor Khan invited me to help coordinate a special issue of the British Journal of Sports Medicine to focus on the topic. He and I have worked over the past few months to recruit an outstanding group of scientists and clinicians to prepare special reports on various aspects of physical activity and health. I am grateful that many of the top people in exercise science from around the world agreed to help with this special issue, and I am very pleased with the high-quality and informative reports that they have provided. This issue contains 18 articles on many topics that provide the background and rationale for giving more attention to physical activity in clinical and public health settings. If you peruse the Table of Contents I am confident that you will find topics of interest. Then the February issue will contain more outstanding reports from leading investigators, with a focus on physical activity interventions in a variety of settings.
Figure 2Risk of cardiovascular disease mortality by cardiorespiratory fitness and body mass index categories, 2316 men with type 2 diabetes at baseline, 179 deaths. Risk ratios are adjusted for age and examination year. Black bars = low cardiorespiratory fitness, white bars = moderate cardiorespiratory fitness (in the obese category, the white bar includes both moderate and high cardiorespiratory fitness, and the grey bar = high cardiorespiratory fitness). (Adapted from Church TS et al. Arch Int Med 2005;165:2114–20)
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