For anyone interested in the relationship between
exercise and
living longer, one of the most pressing questions is how much we really need to
stay healthy. Is 30 minutes a day enough? Can we get by with less? Do we have
to exercise all in one session, or can we spread it throughout the day? And
when we’re talking about exercise, does it have to be hard to count?
اضافة اعلان
For years, exercise scientists tried to quantify the ideal
“dose” of exercise for most people. They finally reached a broad consensus in
2008 with the Physical Activity Guidelines for Americans, which were updated in
2018 after an extensive review of the available science about movement, sitting
and health. In both versions, the guidelines advised anyone who was physically
able to accumulate 150 minutes of moderate exercise every week, and half as
much if it is intense.
But what’s the best way to space out those weekly minutes? And
what does “moderate” mean? Here’s what some of the leading researchers in
exercise science had to say about step counts, stairwells, weekend warriors,
greater longevity and why the healthiest step we can take is the one that gets
us off the couch.
Aim for the 150-minute sweet spot.
“For longevity, 150 minutes a week of moderate to vigorous
intensity physical activity clearly is enough,” said Dr. I-Min Lee, a professor
of epidemiology at the Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health. She has
extensively studied movement and health and helped draft the current national
physical activity guidelines.
For practical purposes, exercise scientists often recommend
breaking that 150 minutes into 30-minute sessions of speedy walking or a
similar activity five times a week. “It is quite clear from numerous
large-scale, well-conducted epidemiological studies that 30 minutes of
moderate-intensity activity most days lowers the risk of premature death and
many diseases, such as stroke, heart attack, Type 2 diabetes and many types of
cancer,” said Ulf Ekelund, a professor specializing in physical activity
epidemiology at the Norwegian School of Sports Sciences in Oslo, who has led
many of those studies.
Moderate exercise, he continued, means “activities that increase
your breathing and heart rate, so the exertion feels like a five or six on a
scale between one and 10.” In other words, pick up the pace a bit if your
inclination is to stroll, but do not feel compelled to sprint.
Consider exercise snacks.
You also can break up your exercise into even smaller segments.
“It doesn’t matter whether exercise is done in a long, continuous 30-minute
session or is dispersed across the day in shorter sessions,” said Emmanuel Stamatakis,
an exercise scientist at the University of Sydney in Australia who studies
physical activity and health.
Recent studies overwhelmingly show that we can accumulate our
150 weekly minutes of moderate exercise in whatever way works best for us, he
said. “Many people may find it easier and more sustainable to squeeze in a few
dozen one-minute or two-minute walks between work tasks” or other commitments.
“There is no special magic to a sustained 30-minute session of exercise” for
most health benefits.
Think of these bite-size workouts as exercise snacks, he said.
“Activities like bursts of very fast walking, stair climbing and carrying
shopping bags provide excellent opportunities for movement snacks.” To
concentrate the health benefits of these workout nuggets, he added, keep the
intensity relatively high, so you feel somewhat winded.
Count your steps.
The exercise recommendations remain the same if you measure your
exercise in steps instead of minutes. For most people, “150 minutes of exercise
a week would translate into about 7,000 to 8,000 steps a day,” Lee said. In a
large-scale new study by Lee and Ekelund of the relationship between steps and
longevity, published in March in The Lancet, the optimal step count for people
younger than 60 was about 8,000 to 10,000 a day, and for those 60 and older, it
was about 6,000 to 8,000 a day.
Consider more.
Of course, these recommendations about steps and minutes focus
on health and life spans, not physical performance. “If you want to run a
marathon or a 10K race as fast as possible, you need much more exercise,” Ekelund
said.
The recommended 150 minutes a week also may be too little to
stave off weight gain with age. In a 2010 study of almost 35,000 women that was
spearheaded by Lee, only those who walked or otherwise exercised moderately for
about an hour a day during middle age maintained their weight as they became
older.
So, if you have the time and inclination, move more than 30
minutes a day, Lee and the other scientists said. In general, according to her
research and other studies, the more active we are, well beyond 30 minutes a
day, the more our risks of chronic diseases drop and the longer our lives may
be.
But any activity is better than none. “Every single minute
counts,” Ekelund said. “Walking up the stairs has health benefits, even if it
only lasts for one or two minutes, if you repeat it regularly.”
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