Do You Sit Too Much? Daily Exercise Is a
From 
Runners World@24:150/1 to 
All on Fri Dec 11 21:31:20 2020
 
 
Do You Sit Too Much? Daily Exercise Is a Great Antidote
   Thirty to 40 minutes of exercise a day helps undo the damage of
   sitting, say new global guidelines.
   By Selene Yeager
   Dec 11, 2020
   benefits of exercise
   Javier Sánchez Mingorance / EyeEmGetty Images
     * Prolonged periods of sedentary time can increase your risk of
       early death, but exceeding the minimum recommended physical
       activity levels of 150 minutes of moderate or 75 minutes of
       vigorous exercise a week can help counter those risks, says the
       World Health Organization (WHO) in its new global activity
       guidelines.
     * People who did just 30 to 40 minutes of moderate to vigorous
       activity had a substantially lower risk of early death—similar to
       those who had very low amounts of sedentary time, according to the
       study.
     * Even very short bouts of activity—less than 10 minutes—accumulated
       throughout the day provide protection.
     __________________________________________________________________
   You know sitting all day is bad for your health. Experts even use a
   term—sitting disease—for the increased health woes and risk of early
   death associated with lots of chair time. So what’s a desk-bound worker
   to do?
   Be sure to exercise 30 to 40 minutes a day, that’s what.
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   The health harms and risk of early death associated with prolonged
   sitting can be offset by exceeding the minimum recommended physical
   activity levels for a person—150 minutes of moderate exercise, or 75
   minutes of vigorous exercise—says the World Health Organization (WHO)
   in its new global guidelines on physical activity and sedentary
   behavior published in a special dedicated issue of the British
   Journal of Sports Medicine.
   These findings come from a research review, which includes nine
   studies. More than 44,000 men and women wore activity trackers and were
   followed for about 10 years. Unsurprisingly, the research reported that
   adults who clocked 10 or more hours of sedentary time a day had a
   significantly higher risk of early death. But that risk was
   particularly pronounced among people who were generally physically
   inactive.
   People who completed 30 to 40 minutes of moderate to vigorous activity
   had a substantially lower risk of early death—similar to those who had
   very low amounts of sedentary time, according to the study.
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   For reference, moderate activity is anything that gets your heart rate
   up, but also allows you to still carry on a conversation. Vigorous
   activity ramps your heart rate up so you’re breathing heavily—enough
   that you can still talk, but just in short sentences.
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   Researchers say these findings reinforce the recommendations set out in
   the 2020 World Health Organization Global Guidelines on Physical
   Activity and Sedentary Behaviour.
   The other important takeaway from this research: All movement counts,
   even five-minute bouts of activity accumulated throughout the day.
   Previously, the guidelines specified that physical activity needed to
   be sustained for at least 10 minutes to be beneficial. That has been
   changed—the body of research shows that physical activity of any
   duration improves all health outcomes and reduces risk of early death.
   “These guidelines are very timely, given that we are in the middle of a
   global pandemic, which has confined people indoors for long periods
   and encouraged an increase in sedentary behavior,” said special issue
   co-editor Professor Emmanuel Stamatakis, of the University of Sydney,
   in a press release.
   “But people can still protect their health and offset the harmful
   effects of physical inactivity. As these guidelines emphasize, all
   physical activity counts and any amount of it is better than none.”
   From: Bicycling US
   Selene Yeager “The Fit Chick” Selene Yeager is a top-selling
   professional health and fitness writer who lives what she writes as a
   NASM certified personal trainer, USA Cycling certified coach, Pn1
   certified nutrition coach, pro licensed off road racer, and
   All-American Ironman triathlete.
   This content is created and maintained by a third party, and imported
   onto this page to help users provide their email addresses. You may be
   able to find more information about this and similar content at
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