User login
We Asked 7 Doctors: How Do You Get Patients to Exercise?
We know exercise can be a powerful medical intervention. Now scientists are finally starting to understand why.
A recent study in rats found that exercise positively changes virtually every tissue in the body. The research was part of a large National Institutes of Health initiative called MoTrPAC (Molecular Transducers of Physical Activity Consortium) to understand how physical activity improves health and prevents disease. As part of the project, a large human study is also underway.
“What was mind-blowing to me was just how much every organ changed,” said cardiologist Euan A. Ashley, MD, professor of medicine at Stanford University, Stanford, California, and the study’s lead author. “You really are a different person on exercise.”
The study examined hundreds of previously sedentary rats that exercised on a treadmill for 8 weeks. Their tissues were compared with a control group of rats that stayed sedentary.
Your patients, unlike lab animals, can’t be randomly assigned to run on a treadmill until you switch the machine off.
So how do you persuade your patients to become more active?
We asked seven doctors what works for them. They shared 10 of their most effective persuasion tactics.
1. Focus on the First Step
“It’s easy to say you want to change behavior,” said Jordan Metzl, MD, a sports medicine specialist at the Hospital for Special Surgery in New York City who instructs medical students on how to prescribe exercise. “It’s much more difficult to do it.”
He compares it with moving a tractor tire from point A to point B. The hardest part is lifting the tire off the ground and starting to move it. “Once it’s rolling, it takes much less effort to keep it going in the same direction,” he said.
How much exercise a patient does is irrelevant until they’ve given that tire its first push.
“Any amount of exercise is better than nothing,” Dr. Ashley said. “Let’s just start with that. Making the move from sitting a lot to standing more has genuine health benefits.”
2. Mind Your Language
Many patients have a deep-rooted aversion to words and phrases associated with physical activity.
“Exercise” is one. “Working out” is another.
“I often tell them they just have to start moving,” said Chris Raynor, MD, an orthopedic surgeon based in Ottawa, Ontario. “Don’t think about it as working out. Think about it as just moving. Start with something they already like doing and work from there.”
3. Make It Manageable
This also applies to patients who’re injured and either waiting for or recovering from surgery.
“Joints like motion,” said Rachel M. Frank, MD, an orthopedic surgeon at the University of Colorado Sports Medicine, Denver, Colorado. “The more mobile you can be, the easier your recovery’s going to be.”
That can be a challenge for a patient who wasn’t active before the injury, especially if he or she is fixed on the idea that exercise doesn’t matter unless they do it for 30-45 minutes at a time.
“I try to break it down into manageable bits they can do at home,” Dr. Frank said. “I say, ‘Look, you brush your teeth twice a day, right? Can you do these exercises for 5 or 10 minutes before or after you brush your teeth?’ ”
4. Connect Their Interests to Their Activity Level
Chad Waterbury, DPT, thought he knew how to motivate a postsurgical patient to become more active and improve her odds for a full recovery. He told her she’d feel better and have more energy — all the usual selling points.
None of it impressed her.
But one day she mentioned that she’d recently become a grandmother for the first time. Dr. Waterbury, a physical therapist based in Los Angeles, noticed how she lit up when she talked about her new granddaughter.
“So I started giving her scenarios, like taking her daughter to Disneyland when she’s 9 or 10. You have to be somewhat fit to do something like that.”
It worked, and Dr. Waterbury learned a fundamental lesson in motivation. “You have to connect the exercise to something that’s important in their life,” he said.
5. Don’t Let a Crisis Go to Waste
“There are very few things more motivating than having a heart attack,” Dr. Ashley said. “For the vast majority of people, that’s a very sobering moment where they reassess everything in their lives.”
There’ll never be a better time to persuade a patient to become more active. In his cardiology practice, Dr. Ashley has seen a lot of patients make that switch.
“They really do start to prioritize their health in a way they never did before,” he said.
6. Emphasize the Practical Over the Ideal
Not all patients attach negative feelings to working out. For some, it’s the goal.
Todd Ivan, MD, calls it the “ ’I need to get to the gym’ lament”: Something they’ve aspired to but rarely if ever done.
“I tell them I’d welcome a half-hour walk every day to get started,” said Dr. Ivan, a consultation-liaison psychiatrist at Summa Health in Akron, Ohio. “It’s a way to introduce the idea that fitness begins with small adjustments.”
7. Go Beneath the Surface
“Exercise doesn’t generally result in great weight loss,” said endocrinologist Karl Nadolsky, DO, an obesity specialist and co-host of the Docs Who Lift podcast.
But a lot of his patients struggle to break that connection. It’s understandable, given how many times they’ve been told they’d weigh less if they moved more.
Dr. Nadolsky tells them it’s what’s on the inside that counts. “I explain it as very literal, meaning their physical health, metabolic health, and mental health.”
By reframing physical activity with an internal rather than external focus — the plumbing and wiring vs the shutters and shingles — he gives them permission to approach exercise as a health upgrade rather than yet another part of their lifelong struggle to lose weight.
“A significant number of our patients respond well to that,” he said.
8. Appeal to Their Intellect
Some patients think like doctors: No matter how reluctant they may be to change their mind about something, they’ll respond to evidence.
Dr. Frank has learned to identify these scientifically inclined patients. “I’ll flood them with data,” she said. “I’ll say, ‘These studies show that if you do x, y, z, your outcome will be better.’ ”
Dr. Ashley takes a similar approach when his patients give him the most common reason for not exercising: “I don’t have time.”
He tells them that exercise doesn’t take time. It gives you time.
That’s according to a 2012 study of more than 650,000 adults that associated physical activity with an increased lifespan.
As one of the authors said in an interview, a middle-aged person who gets 150 minutes a week of moderate exercise will, on average, gain 7 more minutes of life for each minute of exercise, compared with someone who doesn’t get any exercise.
The strategy works because it brings patients out of their day-to-day lives and into the future, Dr. Ashley said.
“What about your entire life?” he asks them. “You’re actually in this world for 80-plus years, you hope. How are you going to spend that? You have to think about that when you’re in your 40s and 50s.”
9. Show Them the Money
Illness and injury, on top of everything else, can be really expensive.
Even with good insurance, a health problem that requires surgery and/or hospitalization might cost thousands of dollars out of pocket. With mediocre insurance, it might be tens of thousands.
Sometimes, Dr. Frank said, it helps to remind patients of the price they paid for their treatment. “I’ll say, ‘Let’s get moving so you don’t have to pay for this again.’ ”
Protecting their investment can be a powerful motivation.
10. Make It a Team Effort
While the doctors we interviewed have a wide range of specialties — cardiology, sports medicine, psychiatry, endocrinology, orthopedics, and physical therapy — their patients have one thing in common.
They don’t want to be in a doctor’s office. It means they have something, need something, or broke something.
It might be a treatable condition that’s merely inconvenient or a life-threatening event that’s flat-out terrifying.
Whatever it is, it pulls them out of their normal world. It can be a lonely, disorienting experience.
Sometimes the best thing a doctor can do is stay connected with the patient. “This is like a team sport,” Dr. Frank tells her patients. “I’m going to be your coach, but you’re the captain of the team.”
In some cases, she’ll ask the patient to message her on the portal after completing the daily or weekly exercises. That alone might motivate the patient — especially when she responds to their messages.
After all, nobody wants to let the coach down.
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
We know exercise can be a powerful medical intervention. Now scientists are finally starting to understand why.
A recent study in rats found that exercise positively changes virtually every tissue in the body. The research was part of a large National Institutes of Health initiative called MoTrPAC (Molecular Transducers of Physical Activity Consortium) to understand how physical activity improves health and prevents disease. As part of the project, a large human study is also underway.
“What was mind-blowing to me was just how much every organ changed,” said cardiologist Euan A. Ashley, MD, professor of medicine at Stanford University, Stanford, California, and the study’s lead author. “You really are a different person on exercise.”
The study examined hundreds of previously sedentary rats that exercised on a treadmill for 8 weeks. Their tissues were compared with a control group of rats that stayed sedentary.
Your patients, unlike lab animals, can’t be randomly assigned to run on a treadmill until you switch the machine off.
So how do you persuade your patients to become more active?
We asked seven doctors what works for them. They shared 10 of their most effective persuasion tactics.
1. Focus on the First Step
“It’s easy to say you want to change behavior,” said Jordan Metzl, MD, a sports medicine specialist at the Hospital for Special Surgery in New York City who instructs medical students on how to prescribe exercise. “It’s much more difficult to do it.”
He compares it with moving a tractor tire from point A to point B. The hardest part is lifting the tire off the ground and starting to move it. “Once it’s rolling, it takes much less effort to keep it going in the same direction,” he said.
How much exercise a patient does is irrelevant until they’ve given that tire its first push.
“Any amount of exercise is better than nothing,” Dr. Ashley said. “Let’s just start with that. Making the move from sitting a lot to standing more has genuine health benefits.”
2. Mind Your Language
Many patients have a deep-rooted aversion to words and phrases associated with physical activity.
“Exercise” is one. “Working out” is another.
“I often tell them they just have to start moving,” said Chris Raynor, MD, an orthopedic surgeon based in Ottawa, Ontario. “Don’t think about it as working out. Think about it as just moving. Start with something they already like doing and work from there.”
3. Make It Manageable
This also applies to patients who’re injured and either waiting for or recovering from surgery.
“Joints like motion,” said Rachel M. Frank, MD, an orthopedic surgeon at the University of Colorado Sports Medicine, Denver, Colorado. “The more mobile you can be, the easier your recovery’s going to be.”
That can be a challenge for a patient who wasn’t active before the injury, especially if he or she is fixed on the idea that exercise doesn’t matter unless they do it for 30-45 minutes at a time.
“I try to break it down into manageable bits they can do at home,” Dr. Frank said. “I say, ‘Look, you brush your teeth twice a day, right? Can you do these exercises for 5 or 10 minutes before or after you brush your teeth?’ ”
4. Connect Their Interests to Their Activity Level
Chad Waterbury, DPT, thought he knew how to motivate a postsurgical patient to become more active and improve her odds for a full recovery. He told her she’d feel better and have more energy — all the usual selling points.
None of it impressed her.
But one day she mentioned that she’d recently become a grandmother for the first time. Dr. Waterbury, a physical therapist based in Los Angeles, noticed how she lit up when she talked about her new granddaughter.
“So I started giving her scenarios, like taking her daughter to Disneyland when she’s 9 or 10. You have to be somewhat fit to do something like that.”
It worked, and Dr. Waterbury learned a fundamental lesson in motivation. “You have to connect the exercise to something that’s important in their life,” he said.
5. Don’t Let a Crisis Go to Waste
“There are very few things more motivating than having a heart attack,” Dr. Ashley said. “For the vast majority of people, that’s a very sobering moment where they reassess everything in their lives.”
There’ll never be a better time to persuade a patient to become more active. In his cardiology practice, Dr. Ashley has seen a lot of patients make that switch.
“They really do start to prioritize their health in a way they never did before,” he said.
6. Emphasize the Practical Over the Ideal
Not all patients attach negative feelings to working out. For some, it’s the goal.
Todd Ivan, MD, calls it the “ ’I need to get to the gym’ lament”: Something they’ve aspired to but rarely if ever done.
“I tell them I’d welcome a half-hour walk every day to get started,” said Dr. Ivan, a consultation-liaison psychiatrist at Summa Health in Akron, Ohio. “It’s a way to introduce the idea that fitness begins with small adjustments.”
7. Go Beneath the Surface
“Exercise doesn’t generally result in great weight loss,” said endocrinologist Karl Nadolsky, DO, an obesity specialist and co-host of the Docs Who Lift podcast.
But a lot of his patients struggle to break that connection. It’s understandable, given how many times they’ve been told they’d weigh less if they moved more.
Dr. Nadolsky tells them it’s what’s on the inside that counts. “I explain it as very literal, meaning their physical health, metabolic health, and mental health.”
By reframing physical activity with an internal rather than external focus — the plumbing and wiring vs the shutters and shingles — he gives them permission to approach exercise as a health upgrade rather than yet another part of their lifelong struggle to lose weight.
“A significant number of our patients respond well to that,” he said.
8. Appeal to Their Intellect
Some patients think like doctors: No matter how reluctant they may be to change their mind about something, they’ll respond to evidence.
Dr. Frank has learned to identify these scientifically inclined patients. “I’ll flood them with data,” she said. “I’ll say, ‘These studies show that if you do x, y, z, your outcome will be better.’ ”
Dr. Ashley takes a similar approach when his patients give him the most common reason for not exercising: “I don’t have time.”
He tells them that exercise doesn’t take time. It gives you time.
That’s according to a 2012 study of more than 650,000 adults that associated physical activity with an increased lifespan.
As one of the authors said in an interview, a middle-aged person who gets 150 minutes a week of moderate exercise will, on average, gain 7 more minutes of life for each minute of exercise, compared with someone who doesn’t get any exercise.
The strategy works because it brings patients out of their day-to-day lives and into the future, Dr. Ashley said.
“What about your entire life?” he asks them. “You’re actually in this world for 80-plus years, you hope. How are you going to spend that? You have to think about that when you’re in your 40s and 50s.”
9. Show Them the Money
Illness and injury, on top of everything else, can be really expensive.
Even with good insurance, a health problem that requires surgery and/or hospitalization might cost thousands of dollars out of pocket. With mediocre insurance, it might be tens of thousands.
Sometimes, Dr. Frank said, it helps to remind patients of the price they paid for their treatment. “I’ll say, ‘Let’s get moving so you don’t have to pay for this again.’ ”
Protecting their investment can be a powerful motivation.
10. Make It a Team Effort
While the doctors we interviewed have a wide range of specialties — cardiology, sports medicine, psychiatry, endocrinology, orthopedics, and physical therapy — their patients have one thing in common.
They don’t want to be in a doctor’s office. It means they have something, need something, or broke something.
It might be a treatable condition that’s merely inconvenient or a life-threatening event that’s flat-out terrifying.
Whatever it is, it pulls them out of their normal world. It can be a lonely, disorienting experience.
Sometimes the best thing a doctor can do is stay connected with the patient. “This is like a team sport,” Dr. Frank tells her patients. “I’m going to be your coach, but you’re the captain of the team.”
In some cases, she’ll ask the patient to message her on the portal after completing the daily or weekly exercises. That alone might motivate the patient — especially when she responds to their messages.
After all, nobody wants to let the coach down.
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
We know exercise can be a powerful medical intervention. Now scientists are finally starting to understand why.
A recent study in rats found that exercise positively changes virtually every tissue in the body. The research was part of a large National Institutes of Health initiative called MoTrPAC (Molecular Transducers of Physical Activity Consortium) to understand how physical activity improves health and prevents disease. As part of the project, a large human study is also underway.
“What was mind-blowing to me was just how much every organ changed,” said cardiologist Euan A. Ashley, MD, professor of medicine at Stanford University, Stanford, California, and the study’s lead author. “You really are a different person on exercise.”
The study examined hundreds of previously sedentary rats that exercised on a treadmill for 8 weeks. Their tissues were compared with a control group of rats that stayed sedentary.
Your patients, unlike lab animals, can’t be randomly assigned to run on a treadmill until you switch the machine off.
So how do you persuade your patients to become more active?
We asked seven doctors what works for them. They shared 10 of their most effective persuasion tactics.
1. Focus on the First Step
“It’s easy to say you want to change behavior,” said Jordan Metzl, MD, a sports medicine specialist at the Hospital for Special Surgery in New York City who instructs medical students on how to prescribe exercise. “It’s much more difficult to do it.”
He compares it with moving a tractor tire from point A to point B. The hardest part is lifting the tire off the ground and starting to move it. “Once it’s rolling, it takes much less effort to keep it going in the same direction,” he said.
How much exercise a patient does is irrelevant until they’ve given that tire its first push.
“Any amount of exercise is better than nothing,” Dr. Ashley said. “Let’s just start with that. Making the move from sitting a lot to standing more has genuine health benefits.”
2. Mind Your Language
Many patients have a deep-rooted aversion to words and phrases associated with physical activity.
“Exercise” is one. “Working out” is another.
“I often tell them they just have to start moving,” said Chris Raynor, MD, an orthopedic surgeon based in Ottawa, Ontario. “Don’t think about it as working out. Think about it as just moving. Start with something they already like doing and work from there.”
3. Make It Manageable
This also applies to patients who’re injured and either waiting for or recovering from surgery.
“Joints like motion,” said Rachel M. Frank, MD, an orthopedic surgeon at the University of Colorado Sports Medicine, Denver, Colorado. “The more mobile you can be, the easier your recovery’s going to be.”
That can be a challenge for a patient who wasn’t active before the injury, especially if he or she is fixed on the idea that exercise doesn’t matter unless they do it for 30-45 minutes at a time.
“I try to break it down into manageable bits they can do at home,” Dr. Frank said. “I say, ‘Look, you brush your teeth twice a day, right? Can you do these exercises for 5 or 10 minutes before or after you brush your teeth?’ ”
4. Connect Their Interests to Their Activity Level
Chad Waterbury, DPT, thought he knew how to motivate a postsurgical patient to become more active and improve her odds for a full recovery. He told her she’d feel better and have more energy — all the usual selling points.
None of it impressed her.
But one day she mentioned that she’d recently become a grandmother for the first time. Dr. Waterbury, a physical therapist based in Los Angeles, noticed how she lit up when she talked about her new granddaughter.
“So I started giving her scenarios, like taking her daughter to Disneyland when she’s 9 or 10. You have to be somewhat fit to do something like that.”
It worked, and Dr. Waterbury learned a fundamental lesson in motivation. “You have to connect the exercise to something that’s important in their life,” he said.
5. Don’t Let a Crisis Go to Waste
“There are very few things more motivating than having a heart attack,” Dr. Ashley said. “For the vast majority of people, that’s a very sobering moment where they reassess everything in their lives.”
There’ll never be a better time to persuade a patient to become more active. In his cardiology practice, Dr. Ashley has seen a lot of patients make that switch.
“They really do start to prioritize their health in a way they never did before,” he said.
6. Emphasize the Practical Over the Ideal
Not all patients attach negative feelings to working out. For some, it’s the goal.
Todd Ivan, MD, calls it the “ ’I need to get to the gym’ lament”: Something they’ve aspired to but rarely if ever done.
“I tell them I’d welcome a half-hour walk every day to get started,” said Dr. Ivan, a consultation-liaison psychiatrist at Summa Health in Akron, Ohio. “It’s a way to introduce the idea that fitness begins with small adjustments.”
7. Go Beneath the Surface
“Exercise doesn’t generally result in great weight loss,” said endocrinologist Karl Nadolsky, DO, an obesity specialist and co-host of the Docs Who Lift podcast.
But a lot of his patients struggle to break that connection. It’s understandable, given how many times they’ve been told they’d weigh less if they moved more.
Dr. Nadolsky tells them it’s what’s on the inside that counts. “I explain it as very literal, meaning their physical health, metabolic health, and mental health.”
By reframing physical activity with an internal rather than external focus — the plumbing and wiring vs the shutters and shingles — he gives them permission to approach exercise as a health upgrade rather than yet another part of their lifelong struggle to lose weight.
“A significant number of our patients respond well to that,” he said.
8. Appeal to Their Intellect
Some patients think like doctors: No matter how reluctant they may be to change their mind about something, they’ll respond to evidence.
Dr. Frank has learned to identify these scientifically inclined patients. “I’ll flood them with data,” she said. “I’ll say, ‘These studies show that if you do x, y, z, your outcome will be better.’ ”
Dr. Ashley takes a similar approach when his patients give him the most common reason for not exercising: “I don’t have time.”
He tells them that exercise doesn’t take time. It gives you time.
That’s according to a 2012 study of more than 650,000 adults that associated physical activity with an increased lifespan.
As one of the authors said in an interview, a middle-aged person who gets 150 minutes a week of moderate exercise will, on average, gain 7 more minutes of life for each minute of exercise, compared with someone who doesn’t get any exercise.
The strategy works because it brings patients out of their day-to-day lives and into the future, Dr. Ashley said.
“What about your entire life?” he asks them. “You’re actually in this world for 80-plus years, you hope. How are you going to spend that? You have to think about that when you’re in your 40s and 50s.”
9. Show Them the Money
Illness and injury, on top of everything else, can be really expensive.
Even with good insurance, a health problem that requires surgery and/or hospitalization might cost thousands of dollars out of pocket. With mediocre insurance, it might be tens of thousands.
Sometimes, Dr. Frank said, it helps to remind patients of the price they paid for their treatment. “I’ll say, ‘Let’s get moving so you don’t have to pay for this again.’ ”
Protecting their investment can be a powerful motivation.
10. Make It a Team Effort
While the doctors we interviewed have a wide range of specialties — cardiology, sports medicine, psychiatry, endocrinology, orthopedics, and physical therapy — their patients have one thing in common.
They don’t want to be in a doctor’s office. It means they have something, need something, or broke something.
It might be a treatable condition that’s merely inconvenient or a life-threatening event that’s flat-out terrifying.
Whatever it is, it pulls them out of their normal world. It can be a lonely, disorienting experience.
Sometimes the best thing a doctor can do is stay connected with the patient. “This is like a team sport,” Dr. Frank tells her patients. “I’m going to be your coach, but you’re the captain of the team.”
In some cases, she’ll ask the patient to message her on the portal after completing the daily or weekly exercises. That alone might motivate the patient — especially when she responds to their messages.
After all, nobody wants to let the coach down.
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
Is Stretching Now Underrated? Accumulating Research Says Yes
For many, stretching is the fitness equivalent of awkward small talk. It’s the opening act, the thing you tolerate because you know it will be over soon.
Others have challenged the practice, suggesting that stretching isn’t necessary at all. Some research has found that a preworkout stretch may even be disadvantageous, weakening muscles and hindering performance.
To put it plainly, no one seems terribly enthusiastic about touching their toes.
That’s why a 2020 study on exercise and mortality was such a head-scratcher. The study found that stretching was uniquely associated with a lower risk for all-cause mortality among American adults. That’s after controlling for participation in other types of exercise.
The finding seemed like a fluke, until a 2023 study found essentially the same thing.
That was slightly better than the risk reduction associated with high volumes of aerobic exercise and resistance training.
How can that be ? It turns out, stretching is linked to several health benefits that you might not expect.
The Surprising Benefits of Stretching
When we talk about stretching, we usually mean static stretching — getting into and holding a position that challenges a muscle, with the goal of improving range of motion around a joint.
It doesn’t need to be a big challenge. “Research shows you can get increases in flexibility by stretching to the initial point of discomfort,” said David Behm, PhD, an exercise scientist at Memorial University of Newfoundland in Canada who’s published dozens of studies on stretching over the past quarter-century.
That brings us to the first benefit.
Stretching Benefit #1: More Strength
At first glance, flexibility training and strength training have little in common. You lengthen muscles in the former and contract them in the latter.
But in both cases, Dr. Behm said, you’re applying tension to muscles and connective tissues. Tension activates proteins called integrins, which send and receive signals across cellular membranes. Those signals are the start of a cascade that leads to protein synthesis. That’s how muscles get bigger and stronger when you lift weights.
That mechanism could explain the small gains in muscle strength and size associated with static stretching, Dr. Behm said.
But can you really stretch your way to muscle growth? Theoretically, yes. But strength training is far more time-efficient, Dr. Behm says. Studies showing increases in muscle mass have typically stretched a single muscle (usually the calves, using a specialized device) for > 30 min/session, 6 d/wk for 6 weeks. And that’s for just one leg.
Still, stretching may be more accessible for some patients — research suggested that older and more sedentary people are most likely to benefit from stretching-induced gains in strength.
Stretching Benefit #2: Reduced Arterial Stiffness
“Most people don’t think about the cardiovascular benefits of stretching,” Dr. Behm said. There are some big ones.
If your body doesn’t move well, it’s not unreasonable to assume your blood doesn’t flow well. That is indeed the case: Poor flexibility is associated with arterial stiffness.
Stretching is associated not only with improved arterial function but also with reductions in resting heart rate and blood pressure and increased vasodilation.
Mobility improvements may have an indirect benefit on cardiovascular health as well.
“Studies show runners are more economical when they’re more flexible,” Dr. Behm said. If your movement is more efficient, you’ll probably do more of it. Doing more, in turn, would lead to improved fitness.
Stretching Benefit #3: Improved Performance
Research is equivocal on whether stretching improves athletic performance, said Joe Yoon, a sports massage therapist in Orlando, Florida, and author of Better Stretching.
“But I’ve always taken the approach that if you can improve your range of motion and get into positions” required for your sport, you’ll probably perform better, with less risk for injury, Mr. Yoon said.
It’s worth noting that some research over the past 30 years has linked pre-exercise static stretching with a loss of strength, power, and/or speed.
But consider this: In a 2016 review, Dr. Behm and his coauthors showed that performance reductions were most likely to occur in two situations:
When participants did extremely long stretches (duration, ≥ 60 sec per muscle).
When researchers tested the participants’ strength, power, or speed immediately after they stretched.
Avoiding those problems is easy, Dr. Behm said: Stretch each muscle for < 60 sec, and combine static stretches with more active warm-up exercises.
“Stretching can impair your performance but only if you do it wrong,” he said.
Stretching Benefit #4: Fewer Injuries
When you stretch, the point where you feel tension is where the muscle is most vulnerable. “That’s where injuries usually happen,” Dr. Behm said.
More flexibility in those areas allows your muscles to safely generate force at longer lengths. For an athlete, that means fewer injuries when they’re doing explosive movements or changing direction.
For nonathletes, flexibility reduces injuries by improving balance. Better balance reduces the risk of falling and helps mitigate the damage if you do take a tumble.
Help Your Patients Get the Benefits of Stretching
Stretching, like training for endurance or strength, can be as complex as you want to make it. But Mr. Yoon advocates a simpler approach.
“You see this flashy stuff online,” he said. “But if you see those trainers in real life or you book a session with them, they go right back to the basics.”
Ideally, Mr. Yoon said, a flexibility routine will work the entire body. But if that’s too big a stretch for your patient, he recommends starting with one or two stretches for the most problematic area.
For example, for a stiff back, try doing the puppy pose at least once a day, although twice is better. Hold the position for 30 seconds to 2 minutes, said Mr. Yoon. Even if you combine it with a dynamic movement like the cat-cow, the two exercises would take just a few minutes a day.
“There’s this misconception that you have to do a lot of it to be successful,” Mr. Yoon said.
Consistency is far more important than volume. Mr. Yoon recommends “a little bit every day — the minimum viable dose.”
As a bonus, stretching an area like your upper back will probably improve your shoulder mobility, Mr. Yoon said. Same with your lower body: Stretches for your hips, over time, should also benefit your knees and lower back.
And thanks to a phenomenon called nonlocal flexibility transfer, lower-body stretches should improve upper-body flexibility, at least temporarily. Shoulder stretches can also have an immediate effect on hip mobility.
“It’s all connected,” Mr. Yoon said, which brings us back to where we started.
If stretching can indeed reduce mortality risk, it’s probably because of interconnected pathways, rather than any single mechanism.
Most obviously, stretching improves flexibility, which makes movement easier, improves balance, and reduces the risk for falls and other types of injuries. It can also lead to small improvements in strength. Less obviously, stretching improves several aspects of cardiovascular function, including circulation.
“There seems to be a global effect in everything we do,” Dr. Behm said. “Whether you’re stretching or weight training, the message is sent throughout your body."
A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.
For many, stretching is the fitness equivalent of awkward small talk. It’s the opening act, the thing you tolerate because you know it will be over soon.
Others have challenged the practice, suggesting that stretching isn’t necessary at all. Some research has found that a preworkout stretch may even be disadvantageous, weakening muscles and hindering performance.
To put it plainly, no one seems terribly enthusiastic about touching their toes.
That’s why a 2020 study on exercise and mortality was such a head-scratcher. The study found that stretching was uniquely associated with a lower risk for all-cause mortality among American adults. That’s after controlling for participation in other types of exercise.
The finding seemed like a fluke, until a 2023 study found essentially the same thing.
That was slightly better than the risk reduction associated with high volumes of aerobic exercise and resistance training.
How can that be ? It turns out, stretching is linked to several health benefits that you might not expect.
The Surprising Benefits of Stretching
When we talk about stretching, we usually mean static stretching — getting into and holding a position that challenges a muscle, with the goal of improving range of motion around a joint.
It doesn’t need to be a big challenge. “Research shows you can get increases in flexibility by stretching to the initial point of discomfort,” said David Behm, PhD, an exercise scientist at Memorial University of Newfoundland in Canada who’s published dozens of studies on stretching over the past quarter-century.
That brings us to the first benefit.
Stretching Benefit #1: More Strength
At first glance, flexibility training and strength training have little in common. You lengthen muscles in the former and contract them in the latter.
But in both cases, Dr. Behm said, you’re applying tension to muscles and connective tissues. Tension activates proteins called integrins, which send and receive signals across cellular membranes. Those signals are the start of a cascade that leads to protein synthesis. That’s how muscles get bigger and stronger when you lift weights.
That mechanism could explain the small gains in muscle strength and size associated with static stretching, Dr. Behm said.
But can you really stretch your way to muscle growth? Theoretically, yes. But strength training is far more time-efficient, Dr. Behm says. Studies showing increases in muscle mass have typically stretched a single muscle (usually the calves, using a specialized device) for > 30 min/session, 6 d/wk for 6 weeks. And that’s for just one leg.
Still, stretching may be more accessible for some patients — research suggested that older and more sedentary people are most likely to benefit from stretching-induced gains in strength.
Stretching Benefit #2: Reduced Arterial Stiffness
“Most people don’t think about the cardiovascular benefits of stretching,” Dr. Behm said. There are some big ones.
If your body doesn’t move well, it’s not unreasonable to assume your blood doesn’t flow well. That is indeed the case: Poor flexibility is associated with arterial stiffness.
Stretching is associated not only with improved arterial function but also with reductions in resting heart rate and blood pressure and increased vasodilation.
Mobility improvements may have an indirect benefit on cardiovascular health as well.
“Studies show runners are more economical when they’re more flexible,” Dr. Behm said. If your movement is more efficient, you’ll probably do more of it. Doing more, in turn, would lead to improved fitness.
Stretching Benefit #3: Improved Performance
Research is equivocal on whether stretching improves athletic performance, said Joe Yoon, a sports massage therapist in Orlando, Florida, and author of Better Stretching.
“But I’ve always taken the approach that if you can improve your range of motion and get into positions” required for your sport, you’ll probably perform better, with less risk for injury, Mr. Yoon said.
It’s worth noting that some research over the past 30 years has linked pre-exercise static stretching with a loss of strength, power, and/or speed.
But consider this: In a 2016 review, Dr. Behm and his coauthors showed that performance reductions were most likely to occur in two situations:
When participants did extremely long stretches (duration, ≥ 60 sec per muscle).
When researchers tested the participants’ strength, power, or speed immediately after they stretched.
Avoiding those problems is easy, Dr. Behm said: Stretch each muscle for < 60 sec, and combine static stretches with more active warm-up exercises.
“Stretching can impair your performance but only if you do it wrong,” he said.
Stretching Benefit #4: Fewer Injuries
When you stretch, the point where you feel tension is where the muscle is most vulnerable. “That’s where injuries usually happen,” Dr. Behm said.
More flexibility in those areas allows your muscles to safely generate force at longer lengths. For an athlete, that means fewer injuries when they’re doing explosive movements or changing direction.
For nonathletes, flexibility reduces injuries by improving balance. Better balance reduces the risk of falling and helps mitigate the damage if you do take a tumble.
Help Your Patients Get the Benefits of Stretching
Stretching, like training for endurance or strength, can be as complex as you want to make it. But Mr. Yoon advocates a simpler approach.
“You see this flashy stuff online,” he said. “But if you see those trainers in real life or you book a session with them, they go right back to the basics.”
Ideally, Mr. Yoon said, a flexibility routine will work the entire body. But if that’s too big a stretch for your patient, he recommends starting with one or two stretches for the most problematic area.
For example, for a stiff back, try doing the puppy pose at least once a day, although twice is better. Hold the position for 30 seconds to 2 minutes, said Mr. Yoon. Even if you combine it with a dynamic movement like the cat-cow, the two exercises would take just a few minutes a day.
“There’s this misconception that you have to do a lot of it to be successful,” Mr. Yoon said.
Consistency is far more important than volume. Mr. Yoon recommends “a little bit every day — the minimum viable dose.”
As a bonus, stretching an area like your upper back will probably improve your shoulder mobility, Mr. Yoon said. Same with your lower body: Stretches for your hips, over time, should also benefit your knees and lower back.
And thanks to a phenomenon called nonlocal flexibility transfer, lower-body stretches should improve upper-body flexibility, at least temporarily. Shoulder stretches can also have an immediate effect on hip mobility.
“It’s all connected,” Mr. Yoon said, which brings us back to where we started.
If stretching can indeed reduce mortality risk, it’s probably because of interconnected pathways, rather than any single mechanism.
Most obviously, stretching improves flexibility, which makes movement easier, improves balance, and reduces the risk for falls and other types of injuries. It can also lead to small improvements in strength. Less obviously, stretching improves several aspects of cardiovascular function, including circulation.
“There seems to be a global effect in everything we do,” Dr. Behm said. “Whether you’re stretching or weight training, the message is sent throughout your body."
A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.
For many, stretching is the fitness equivalent of awkward small talk. It’s the opening act, the thing you tolerate because you know it will be over soon.
Others have challenged the practice, suggesting that stretching isn’t necessary at all. Some research has found that a preworkout stretch may even be disadvantageous, weakening muscles and hindering performance.
To put it plainly, no one seems terribly enthusiastic about touching their toes.
That’s why a 2020 study on exercise and mortality was such a head-scratcher. The study found that stretching was uniquely associated with a lower risk for all-cause mortality among American adults. That’s after controlling for participation in other types of exercise.
The finding seemed like a fluke, until a 2023 study found essentially the same thing.
That was slightly better than the risk reduction associated with high volumes of aerobic exercise and resistance training.
How can that be ? It turns out, stretching is linked to several health benefits that you might not expect.
The Surprising Benefits of Stretching
When we talk about stretching, we usually mean static stretching — getting into and holding a position that challenges a muscle, with the goal of improving range of motion around a joint.
It doesn’t need to be a big challenge. “Research shows you can get increases in flexibility by stretching to the initial point of discomfort,” said David Behm, PhD, an exercise scientist at Memorial University of Newfoundland in Canada who’s published dozens of studies on stretching over the past quarter-century.
That brings us to the first benefit.
Stretching Benefit #1: More Strength
At first glance, flexibility training and strength training have little in common. You lengthen muscles in the former and contract them in the latter.
But in both cases, Dr. Behm said, you’re applying tension to muscles and connective tissues. Tension activates proteins called integrins, which send and receive signals across cellular membranes. Those signals are the start of a cascade that leads to protein synthesis. That’s how muscles get bigger and stronger when you lift weights.
That mechanism could explain the small gains in muscle strength and size associated with static stretching, Dr. Behm said.
But can you really stretch your way to muscle growth? Theoretically, yes. But strength training is far more time-efficient, Dr. Behm says. Studies showing increases in muscle mass have typically stretched a single muscle (usually the calves, using a specialized device) for > 30 min/session, 6 d/wk for 6 weeks. And that’s for just one leg.
Still, stretching may be more accessible for some patients — research suggested that older and more sedentary people are most likely to benefit from stretching-induced gains in strength.
Stretching Benefit #2: Reduced Arterial Stiffness
“Most people don’t think about the cardiovascular benefits of stretching,” Dr. Behm said. There are some big ones.
If your body doesn’t move well, it’s not unreasonable to assume your blood doesn’t flow well. That is indeed the case: Poor flexibility is associated with arterial stiffness.
Stretching is associated not only with improved arterial function but also with reductions in resting heart rate and blood pressure and increased vasodilation.
Mobility improvements may have an indirect benefit on cardiovascular health as well.
“Studies show runners are more economical when they’re more flexible,” Dr. Behm said. If your movement is more efficient, you’ll probably do more of it. Doing more, in turn, would lead to improved fitness.
Stretching Benefit #3: Improved Performance
Research is equivocal on whether stretching improves athletic performance, said Joe Yoon, a sports massage therapist in Orlando, Florida, and author of Better Stretching.
“But I’ve always taken the approach that if you can improve your range of motion and get into positions” required for your sport, you’ll probably perform better, with less risk for injury, Mr. Yoon said.
It’s worth noting that some research over the past 30 years has linked pre-exercise static stretching with a loss of strength, power, and/or speed.
But consider this: In a 2016 review, Dr. Behm and his coauthors showed that performance reductions were most likely to occur in two situations:
When participants did extremely long stretches (duration, ≥ 60 sec per muscle).
When researchers tested the participants’ strength, power, or speed immediately after they stretched.
Avoiding those problems is easy, Dr. Behm said: Stretch each muscle for < 60 sec, and combine static stretches with more active warm-up exercises.
“Stretching can impair your performance but only if you do it wrong,” he said.
Stretching Benefit #4: Fewer Injuries
When you stretch, the point where you feel tension is where the muscle is most vulnerable. “That’s where injuries usually happen,” Dr. Behm said.
More flexibility in those areas allows your muscles to safely generate force at longer lengths. For an athlete, that means fewer injuries when they’re doing explosive movements or changing direction.
For nonathletes, flexibility reduces injuries by improving balance. Better balance reduces the risk of falling and helps mitigate the damage if you do take a tumble.
Help Your Patients Get the Benefits of Stretching
Stretching, like training for endurance or strength, can be as complex as you want to make it. But Mr. Yoon advocates a simpler approach.
“You see this flashy stuff online,” he said. “But if you see those trainers in real life or you book a session with them, they go right back to the basics.”
Ideally, Mr. Yoon said, a flexibility routine will work the entire body. But if that’s too big a stretch for your patient, he recommends starting with one or two stretches for the most problematic area.
For example, for a stiff back, try doing the puppy pose at least once a day, although twice is better. Hold the position for 30 seconds to 2 minutes, said Mr. Yoon. Even if you combine it with a dynamic movement like the cat-cow, the two exercises would take just a few minutes a day.
“There’s this misconception that you have to do a lot of it to be successful,” Mr. Yoon said.
Consistency is far more important than volume. Mr. Yoon recommends “a little bit every day — the minimum viable dose.”
As a bonus, stretching an area like your upper back will probably improve your shoulder mobility, Mr. Yoon said. Same with your lower body: Stretches for your hips, over time, should also benefit your knees and lower back.
And thanks to a phenomenon called nonlocal flexibility transfer, lower-body stretches should improve upper-body flexibility, at least temporarily. Shoulder stretches can also have an immediate effect on hip mobility.
“It’s all connected,” Mr. Yoon said, which brings us back to where we started.
If stretching can indeed reduce mortality risk, it’s probably because of interconnected pathways, rather than any single mechanism.
Most obviously, stretching improves flexibility, which makes movement easier, improves balance, and reduces the risk for falls and other types of injuries. It can also lead to small improvements in strength. Less obviously, stretching improves several aspects of cardiovascular function, including circulation.
“There seems to be a global effect in everything we do,” Dr. Behm said. “Whether you’re stretching or weight training, the message is sent throughout your body."
A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.
How to prescribe exercise in 5 steps
Clinicians are well aware of the benefits of physical activity and the consequences of inactivity.
Managing the diseases associated with inactivity – heart disease, type 2 diabetes, hypertension – falls to physicians. So one might assume they routinely prescribe exercise to their patients, just as they would statins, insulin, or beta-blockers.
But evidence indicates that doctors don’t routinely have those conversations. They may lack confidence in their ability to give effective advice, fear offending patients, or simply not know what to say.
That’s understandable. Many doctors receive little training on how to counsel patients to exercise, according to research over the past decade. Despite efforts to improve this, many medical students still feel unprepared to prescribe physical activity to patients.
But here’s the thing: Doctors are in a unique position to change things.
Only 28% of Americans meet physical activity guidelines, according to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. At the same time, other research suggests that patients want to be more active and would like help from their doctor.
“Patients are motivated to hear about physical activity from physicians and try to make a change,” says Jane Thornton, MD, PhD, an assistant professor in family medicine at Western University, Ont. “Just saying something, even if you don’t have specialized knowledge, makes a difference because of the credibility we have as physicians.”
Conveniently, just like exercise, the best way to get started is to ... get started.
Here’s how to break down the process into steps.
1. Ask patients about their physical activity
Think of this as taking any kind of patient history, only for physical activity.
Do they have a regular exercise routine? For how many minutes a day are they active? How many days a week?
“It takes less than a minute to ask and record,” Dr. Thornton says. Once you put it into the patient’s electronic record, you have something you can track.
2. Write an actual prescription
By giving the patient a written, printed prescription when they leave your office, “you’re showing it’s an important part of treatment or prevention,” Dr. Thornton explains. It puts physical activity on the level of a vital sign.
Include frequency, intensity, time, and type of exercise. The American College of Sports Medicine’s Exercise is Medicine initiative provides a prescription template you can use.
3. Measure what they do
Measurement helps the patient adopt the new behavior, and it helps the physician provide tailored advice going forward, Dr. Thornton says.
With the rise of health-monitoring wearables, tracking activity has never been easier. Of course, not everyone wants to (or can afford to) use a smartwatch or fitness tracker.
For tech-averse patients, ask if they’re willing to write something down, like how many minutes they spent walking, or how many yoga classes they attended. You may never get this from some patients, but it never hurts to ask.
4. Refer out when necessary
This brings us to a sticky issue for many physicians: lack of confidence in their ability to speak authoritatively about physical activity. “In most cases, you can absolutely say, ‘Start slow, go gradually,’ that kind of thing,” Dr. Thornton says. “As with anything, confidence will come with practice.”
For specific prescriptive advice, check out the Exercise is Medicine website, which also has handouts you can share with patients and information for specific conditions. If your patient has prediabetes, you can also point them toward the CDC’s diabetes prevention program, which is available in-person or online and may be free or covered by insurance.
If a patient has contraindications, refer out. If you don’t have exercise or rehab professionals in your network, Dr. Thornton recommends reaching out to your regional or national association of sports-medicine professionals. You should be able to find it with a quick Google search.
5. Follow up
Ask about physical activity during every contact, either in person or online.
Dr. Thornton says the second and fifth steps matter most to patients, especially when the prescription and follow-up come from their primary care physician, rather than a nurse or physician assistant to whom you’ve delegated the task.
“The value comes in having a physician emphasize the importance,” Dr. Thornton says. The more time you spend on it, the more that value comes through.
What NOT to say to patients about exercise
This might surprise you:
“I definitely don’t think telling people the official recommendations for physical activity is useful,” says Yoni Freedhoff, MD, an associate professor of family medicine at the University of Ottawa and medical director of the Bariatric Medical Institute. “If anything, I’d venture it’s counterproductive.”
It’s not that there’s anything wrong with the recommended minimum – 150 minutes of moderate-to-vigorous-intensity physical activity per week. The problem is what it says to a patient who doesn’t come close to those standards.
“Few real-world people have the interest, time, energy, or privilege to achieve them,” Dr. Freedhoff says. “Many will recognize that instantly and consequently feel [that] less than that is pointless.”
And that, Dr. Thornton says, is categorically not true. “Even minimal physical activity, in some cases, is beneficial.”
You also want to avoid any explicit connection between exercise and weight loss, Dr. Thornton says.
Though many people do connect the two, the link is often negative, notes a 2019 study from the University of Toronto., triggering painful memories that might go all the way back to gym class.
Try this pivot from Dr. Freedhoff: “Focus on the role of exercise in mitigating the risks of weight,” he says – like decreasing pain, increasing energy, and improving sleep.
How to motivate patients to move
New research backs up this more positive approach. In a study published in Annals of Internal Medicine, doctors in the United Kingdom who emphasized benefits and minimized health harms convinced more patients to join a weight management program than negative or neutral docs did. These doctors conveyed optimism and excitement, smiling and avoiding any mention of obesity or body mass index.
Exactly what benefits inspire change will be different for each patient. But in general, the more immediate the benefit, the more motivating it will be.
As the University of Toronto study noted, patients weren’t motivated by vague, distant goals like “increasing life expectancy or avoiding health problems many years in the future.”
They’re much more likely to take action to avoid surgery, reduce medications, or minimize the risk of falling.
For an older patient, Dr. Freedhoff says, “focusing on the preservation of functional independence can be extremely motivating.” That’s especially true if the patient has vivid memories of seeing a sedentary loved one decline late in life.
For patients who may be more focused on appearance, they could respond to the idea of improving their body composition. For that, “we talk about the quality of weight loss,” says Spencer Nadolsky, DO, an obesity and lipid specialist and medical director of WeightWatchers. “Ultimately, exercise helps shape the body instead of just changing the number on the scale.”
Reducing resistance to resistance training
A conversation about reshaping the body or avoiding age-related disabilities leads naturally to resistance training.
“I always frame resistance training as the single most valuable thing a person might do to try to preserve their functional independence,” Dr. Freedhoff says. If the patient is over 65, he won’t wait for them to show an interest. “I’ll absolutely bring it up with them directly.”
Dr. Freedhoff has an on-site training facility where trainers show patients how to work out at home with minimal equipment, like dumbbells and resistance bands.
Most doctors, however, don’t have those options. That can lead to a tricky conversation. Participants in the University of Toronto study told the authors they disliked the gym, finding it “boring, intimidating, or discouraging.”
And yet, “a common suggestion ... from health care providers was to join a gym.”
Many patients, Spencer Nadolsky, MD, says, associate strength training with “grunting, groaning, or getting ‘bulky’ vs. ‘toned.’ ” Memories of soreness from overzealous workouts are another barrier.
He recommends “starting small and slow,” with one or two full-body workouts a week. Those initial workouts might include just one to two sets of four to five exercises. “Consider if someone is exercising at home or in a gym to build a routine around equipment that’s available to them,” Dr. Nadolsky says.
Once you determine what you have to work with, help the patient choose exercises that fit their needs, goals, preferences, limitations, and prior injuries.
One more consideration: While Dr. Nadolsky tries to “stay away from telling a patient they need to do specific types of exercise to be successful,” he makes an exception for patients who’re taking a GLP-1 agonist. “There is a concern for muscle mass loss along with fat loss.”
Practicing, preaching, and checking privilege
When Dr. Thornton, Dr. Freedhoff, and Dr. Nadolsky discuss exercise, their patients know they practice what they preach.
Dr. Nadolsky, who was a nationally ranked wrestler at the University of North Carolina, hosts the Docs Who Lift podcast with his brother, Karl Nadolsky, MD.
Dr. Freedhoff is also a lifter and fitness enthusiast, and Dr. Thornton was a world-class rower whose team came within 0.8 seconds of a silver medal at the Beijing Olympics. (They finished fourth.)
But not all physicians follow their own lifestyle advice, Dr. Freedhoff says. That doesn’t make them bad doctors – it makes them human.
“I’ve done 300 minutes a week of exercise” – the recommended amount for weight maintenance – “to see what’s involved,” Dr. Freedhoff says. “That’s far, far, far from a trivial amount.”
That leads to this advice for his fellow physicians:
“The most important thing to know about exercise is that finding the time and having the health to do so is a privilege,” he says.
Understanding that is crucial for assessing your patient’s needs and providing the right help.
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
Clinicians are well aware of the benefits of physical activity and the consequences of inactivity.
Managing the diseases associated with inactivity – heart disease, type 2 diabetes, hypertension – falls to physicians. So one might assume they routinely prescribe exercise to their patients, just as they would statins, insulin, or beta-blockers.
But evidence indicates that doctors don’t routinely have those conversations. They may lack confidence in their ability to give effective advice, fear offending patients, or simply not know what to say.
That’s understandable. Many doctors receive little training on how to counsel patients to exercise, according to research over the past decade. Despite efforts to improve this, many medical students still feel unprepared to prescribe physical activity to patients.
But here’s the thing: Doctors are in a unique position to change things.
Only 28% of Americans meet physical activity guidelines, according to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. At the same time, other research suggests that patients want to be more active and would like help from their doctor.
“Patients are motivated to hear about physical activity from physicians and try to make a change,” says Jane Thornton, MD, PhD, an assistant professor in family medicine at Western University, Ont. “Just saying something, even if you don’t have specialized knowledge, makes a difference because of the credibility we have as physicians.”
Conveniently, just like exercise, the best way to get started is to ... get started.
Here’s how to break down the process into steps.
1. Ask patients about their physical activity
Think of this as taking any kind of patient history, only for physical activity.
Do they have a regular exercise routine? For how many minutes a day are they active? How many days a week?
“It takes less than a minute to ask and record,” Dr. Thornton says. Once you put it into the patient’s electronic record, you have something you can track.
2. Write an actual prescription
By giving the patient a written, printed prescription when they leave your office, “you’re showing it’s an important part of treatment or prevention,” Dr. Thornton explains. It puts physical activity on the level of a vital sign.
Include frequency, intensity, time, and type of exercise. The American College of Sports Medicine’s Exercise is Medicine initiative provides a prescription template you can use.
3. Measure what they do
Measurement helps the patient adopt the new behavior, and it helps the physician provide tailored advice going forward, Dr. Thornton says.
With the rise of health-monitoring wearables, tracking activity has never been easier. Of course, not everyone wants to (or can afford to) use a smartwatch or fitness tracker.
For tech-averse patients, ask if they’re willing to write something down, like how many minutes they spent walking, or how many yoga classes they attended. You may never get this from some patients, but it never hurts to ask.
4. Refer out when necessary
This brings us to a sticky issue for many physicians: lack of confidence in their ability to speak authoritatively about physical activity. “In most cases, you can absolutely say, ‘Start slow, go gradually,’ that kind of thing,” Dr. Thornton says. “As with anything, confidence will come with practice.”
For specific prescriptive advice, check out the Exercise is Medicine website, which also has handouts you can share with patients and information for specific conditions. If your patient has prediabetes, you can also point them toward the CDC’s diabetes prevention program, which is available in-person or online and may be free or covered by insurance.
If a patient has contraindications, refer out. If you don’t have exercise or rehab professionals in your network, Dr. Thornton recommends reaching out to your regional or national association of sports-medicine professionals. You should be able to find it with a quick Google search.
5. Follow up
Ask about physical activity during every contact, either in person or online.
Dr. Thornton says the second and fifth steps matter most to patients, especially when the prescription and follow-up come from their primary care physician, rather than a nurse or physician assistant to whom you’ve delegated the task.
“The value comes in having a physician emphasize the importance,” Dr. Thornton says. The more time you spend on it, the more that value comes through.
What NOT to say to patients about exercise
This might surprise you:
“I definitely don’t think telling people the official recommendations for physical activity is useful,” says Yoni Freedhoff, MD, an associate professor of family medicine at the University of Ottawa and medical director of the Bariatric Medical Institute. “If anything, I’d venture it’s counterproductive.”
It’s not that there’s anything wrong with the recommended minimum – 150 minutes of moderate-to-vigorous-intensity physical activity per week. The problem is what it says to a patient who doesn’t come close to those standards.
“Few real-world people have the interest, time, energy, or privilege to achieve them,” Dr. Freedhoff says. “Many will recognize that instantly and consequently feel [that] less than that is pointless.”
And that, Dr. Thornton says, is categorically not true. “Even minimal physical activity, in some cases, is beneficial.”
You also want to avoid any explicit connection between exercise and weight loss, Dr. Thornton says.
Though many people do connect the two, the link is often negative, notes a 2019 study from the University of Toronto., triggering painful memories that might go all the way back to gym class.
Try this pivot from Dr. Freedhoff: “Focus on the role of exercise in mitigating the risks of weight,” he says – like decreasing pain, increasing energy, and improving sleep.
How to motivate patients to move
New research backs up this more positive approach. In a study published in Annals of Internal Medicine, doctors in the United Kingdom who emphasized benefits and minimized health harms convinced more patients to join a weight management program than negative or neutral docs did. These doctors conveyed optimism and excitement, smiling and avoiding any mention of obesity or body mass index.
Exactly what benefits inspire change will be different for each patient. But in general, the more immediate the benefit, the more motivating it will be.
As the University of Toronto study noted, patients weren’t motivated by vague, distant goals like “increasing life expectancy or avoiding health problems many years in the future.”
They’re much more likely to take action to avoid surgery, reduce medications, or minimize the risk of falling.
For an older patient, Dr. Freedhoff says, “focusing on the preservation of functional independence can be extremely motivating.” That’s especially true if the patient has vivid memories of seeing a sedentary loved one decline late in life.
For patients who may be more focused on appearance, they could respond to the idea of improving their body composition. For that, “we talk about the quality of weight loss,” says Spencer Nadolsky, DO, an obesity and lipid specialist and medical director of WeightWatchers. “Ultimately, exercise helps shape the body instead of just changing the number on the scale.”
Reducing resistance to resistance training
A conversation about reshaping the body or avoiding age-related disabilities leads naturally to resistance training.
“I always frame resistance training as the single most valuable thing a person might do to try to preserve their functional independence,” Dr. Freedhoff says. If the patient is over 65, he won’t wait for them to show an interest. “I’ll absolutely bring it up with them directly.”
Dr. Freedhoff has an on-site training facility where trainers show patients how to work out at home with minimal equipment, like dumbbells and resistance bands.
Most doctors, however, don’t have those options. That can lead to a tricky conversation. Participants in the University of Toronto study told the authors they disliked the gym, finding it “boring, intimidating, or discouraging.”
And yet, “a common suggestion ... from health care providers was to join a gym.”
Many patients, Spencer Nadolsky, MD, says, associate strength training with “grunting, groaning, or getting ‘bulky’ vs. ‘toned.’ ” Memories of soreness from overzealous workouts are another barrier.
He recommends “starting small and slow,” with one or two full-body workouts a week. Those initial workouts might include just one to two sets of four to five exercises. “Consider if someone is exercising at home or in a gym to build a routine around equipment that’s available to them,” Dr. Nadolsky says.
Once you determine what you have to work with, help the patient choose exercises that fit their needs, goals, preferences, limitations, and prior injuries.
One more consideration: While Dr. Nadolsky tries to “stay away from telling a patient they need to do specific types of exercise to be successful,” he makes an exception for patients who’re taking a GLP-1 agonist. “There is a concern for muscle mass loss along with fat loss.”
Practicing, preaching, and checking privilege
When Dr. Thornton, Dr. Freedhoff, and Dr. Nadolsky discuss exercise, their patients know they practice what they preach.
Dr. Nadolsky, who was a nationally ranked wrestler at the University of North Carolina, hosts the Docs Who Lift podcast with his brother, Karl Nadolsky, MD.
Dr. Freedhoff is also a lifter and fitness enthusiast, and Dr. Thornton was a world-class rower whose team came within 0.8 seconds of a silver medal at the Beijing Olympics. (They finished fourth.)
But not all physicians follow their own lifestyle advice, Dr. Freedhoff says. That doesn’t make them bad doctors – it makes them human.
“I’ve done 300 minutes a week of exercise” – the recommended amount for weight maintenance – “to see what’s involved,” Dr. Freedhoff says. “That’s far, far, far from a trivial amount.”
That leads to this advice for his fellow physicians:
“The most important thing to know about exercise is that finding the time and having the health to do so is a privilege,” he says.
Understanding that is crucial for assessing your patient’s needs and providing the right help.
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
Clinicians are well aware of the benefits of physical activity and the consequences of inactivity.
Managing the diseases associated with inactivity – heart disease, type 2 diabetes, hypertension – falls to physicians. So one might assume they routinely prescribe exercise to their patients, just as they would statins, insulin, or beta-blockers.
But evidence indicates that doctors don’t routinely have those conversations. They may lack confidence in their ability to give effective advice, fear offending patients, or simply not know what to say.
That’s understandable. Many doctors receive little training on how to counsel patients to exercise, according to research over the past decade. Despite efforts to improve this, many medical students still feel unprepared to prescribe physical activity to patients.
But here’s the thing: Doctors are in a unique position to change things.
Only 28% of Americans meet physical activity guidelines, according to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. At the same time, other research suggests that patients want to be more active and would like help from their doctor.
“Patients are motivated to hear about physical activity from physicians and try to make a change,” says Jane Thornton, MD, PhD, an assistant professor in family medicine at Western University, Ont. “Just saying something, even if you don’t have specialized knowledge, makes a difference because of the credibility we have as physicians.”
Conveniently, just like exercise, the best way to get started is to ... get started.
Here’s how to break down the process into steps.
1. Ask patients about their physical activity
Think of this as taking any kind of patient history, only for physical activity.
Do they have a regular exercise routine? For how many minutes a day are they active? How many days a week?
“It takes less than a minute to ask and record,” Dr. Thornton says. Once you put it into the patient’s electronic record, you have something you can track.
2. Write an actual prescription
By giving the patient a written, printed prescription when they leave your office, “you’re showing it’s an important part of treatment or prevention,” Dr. Thornton explains. It puts physical activity on the level of a vital sign.
Include frequency, intensity, time, and type of exercise. The American College of Sports Medicine’s Exercise is Medicine initiative provides a prescription template you can use.
3. Measure what they do
Measurement helps the patient adopt the new behavior, and it helps the physician provide tailored advice going forward, Dr. Thornton says.
With the rise of health-monitoring wearables, tracking activity has never been easier. Of course, not everyone wants to (or can afford to) use a smartwatch or fitness tracker.
For tech-averse patients, ask if they’re willing to write something down, like how many minutes they spent walking, or how many yoga classes they attended. You may never get this from some patients, but it never hurts to ask.
4. Refer out when necessary
This brings us to a sticky issue for many physicians: lack of confidence in their ability to speak authoritatively about physical activity. “In most cases, you can absolutely say, ‘Start slow, go gradually,’ that kind of thing,” Dr. Thornton says. “As with anything, confidence will come with practice.”
For specific prescriptive advice, check out the Exercise is Medicine website, which also has handouts you can share with patients and information for specific conditions. If your patient has prediabetes, you can also point them toward the CDC’s diabetes prevention program, which is available in-person or online and may be free or covered by insurance.
If a patient has contraindications, refer out. If you don’t have exercise or rehab professionals in your network, Dr. Thornton recommends reaching out to your regional or national association of sports-medicine professionals. You should be able to find it with a quick Google search.
5. Follow up
Ask about physical activity during every contact, either in person or online.
Dr. Thornton says the second and fifth steps matter most to patients, especially when the prescription and follow-up come from their primary care physician, rather than a nurse or physician assistant to whom you’ve delegated the task.
“The value comes in having a physician emphasize the importance,” Dr. Thornton says. The more time you spend on it, the more that value comes through.
What NOT to say to patients about exercise
This might surprise you:
“I definitely don’t think telling people the official recommendations for physical activity is useful,” says Yoni Freedhoff, MD, an associate professor of family medicine at the University of Ottawa and medical director of the Bariatric Medical Institute. “If anything, I’d venture it’s counterproductive.”
It’s not that there’s anything wrong with the recommended minimum – 150 minutes of moderate-to-vigorous-intensity physical activity per week. The problem is what it says to a patient who doesn’t come close to those standards.
“Few real-world people have the interest, time, energy, or privilege to achieve them,” Dr. Freedhoff says. “Many will recognize that instantly and consequently feel [that] less than that is pointless.”
And that, Dr. Thornton says, is categorically not true. “Even minimal physical activity, in some cases, is beneficial.”
You also want to avoid any explicit connection between exercise and weight loss, Dr. Thornton says.
Though many people do connect the two, the link is often negative, notes a 2019 study from the University of Toronto., triggering painful memories that might go all the way back to gym class.
Try this pivot from Dr. Freedhoff: “Focus on the role of exercise in mitigating the risks of weight,” he says – like decreasing pain, increasing energy, and improving sleep.
How to motivate patients to move
New research backs up this more positive approach. In a study published in Annals of Internal Medicine, doctors in the United Kingdom who emphasized benefits and minimized health harms convinced more patients to join a weight management program than negative or neutral docs did. These doctors conveyed optimism and excitement, smiling and avoiding any mention of obesity or body mass index.
Exactly what benefits inspire change will be different for each patient. But in general, the more immediate the benefit, the more motivating it will be.
As the University of Toronto study noted, patients weren’t motivated by vague, distant goals like “increasing life expectancy or avoiding health problems many years in the future.”
They’re much more likely to take action to avoid surgery, reduce medications, or minimize the risk of falling.
For an older patient, Dr. Freedhoff says, “focusing on the preservation of functional independence can be extremely motivating.” That’s especially true if the patient has vivid memories of seeing a sedentary loved one decline late in life.
For patients who may be more focused on appearance, they could respond to the idea of improving their body composition. For that, “we talk about the quality of weight loss,” says Spencer Nadolsky, DO, an obesity and lipid specialist and medical director of WeightWatchers. “Ultimately, exercise helps shape the body instead of just changing the number on the scale.”
Reducing resistance to resistance training
A conversation about reshaping the body or avoiding age-related disabilities leads naturally to resistance training.
“I always frame resistance training as the single most valuable thing a person might do to try to preserve their functional independence,” Dr. Freedhoff says. If the patient is over 65, he won’t wait for them to show an interest. “I’ll absolutely bring it up with them directly.”
Dr. Freedhoff has an on-site training facility where trainers show patients how to work out at home with minimal equipment, like dumbbells and resistance bands.
Most doctors, however, don’t have those options. That can lead to a tricky conversation. Participants in the University of Toronto study told the authors they disliked the gym, finding it “boring, intimidating, or discouraging.”
And yet, “a common suggestion ... from health care providers was to join a gym.”
Many patients, Spencer Nadolsky, MD, says, associate strength training with “grunting, groaning, or getting ‘bulky’ vs. ‘toned.’ ” Memories of soreness from overzealous workouts are another barrier.
He recommends “starting small and slow,” with one or two full-body workouts a week. Those initial workouts might include just one to two sets of four to five exercises. “Consider if someone is exercising at home or in a gym to build a routine around equipment that’s available to them,” Dr. Nadolsky says.
Once you determine what you have to work with, help the patient choose exercises that fit their needs, goals, preferences, limitations, and prior injuries.
One more consideration: While Dr. Nadolsky tries to “stay away from telling a patient they need to do specific types of exercise to be successful,” he makes an exception for patients who’re taking a GLP-1 agonist. “There is a concern for muscle mass loss along with fat loss.”
Practicing, preaching, and checking privilege
When Dr. Thornton, Dr. Freedhoff, and Dr. Nadolsky discuss exercise, their patients know they practice what they preach.
Dr. Nadolsky, who was a nationally ranked wrestler at the University of North Carolina, hosts the Docs Who Lift podcast with his brother, Karl Nadolsky, MD.
Dr. Freedhoff is also a lifter and fitness enthusiast, and Dr. Thornton was a world-class rower whose team came within 0.8 seconds of a silver medal at the Beijing Olympics. (They finished fourth.)
But not all physicians follow their own lifestyle advice, Dr. Freedhoff says. That doesn’t make them bad doctors – it makes them human.
“I’ve done 300 minutes a week of exercise” – the recommended amount for weight maintenance – “to see what’s involved,” Dr. Freedhoff says. “That’s far, far, far from a trivial amount.”
That leads to this advice for his fellow physicians:
“The most important thing to know about exercise is that finding the time and having the health to do so is a privilege,” he says.
Understanding that is crucial for assessing your patient’s needs and providing the right help.
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
The surprising way to fight asthma symptoms
Asthma is a sneaky foe.
But that doesn’t mean exercise should be avoided, she said.
Exercise, in fact, is one of the best ways to reduce asthma symptoms. Research over the past 2 decades has shown that physical activity can help improve lung function and boost quality of life for someone with asthma.
As their fitness improves, asthma patients report better sleep, reduced stress, improved weight control, and more days without symptoms. In some cases, they’re able to cut down their medication doses.
Exercise reduces inflammatory cytokines and increases anti-inflammatory cytokines, according to a 2023 review by researchers in the United Kingdom. That could help calm chronic airway inflammation, easing symptoms of asthma.
A few simple guidelines can help patients reap those benefits while staying safe.
Make sure the first steps aren’t the last steps
For someone who’s new to exercise, there’s only one way to begin: Carefully.
The Global Initiative for Asthma recommends twice-weekly cardio and strength training.
“You always start low and slow,” said Spencer Nadolsky, DO, a board-certified obesity and lipid specialist and medical director of Sequence, a comprehensive weight management program.
“Low” means light loads in the weight room. “Slow” means short, easy walks.
Many have been put “through the wringer” when starting out, discouraging them from continuing, Dr. Nadolsky said. “They were too sore, and it felt more like punishment.”
An even bigger concern is triggering an asthma attack. Patients should take steps to lower the risk by carrying their rescue inhalers and keeping up on medications, he added.
“A health care professional should be consulted” before the start of a new activity or ramping up a program, or anytime asthma interferes with a workout, Dr. George said.
Those who exercise outside need to be aware of the air quality, especially at a time when smoke and particulates from a wildfires in Canada can trigger asthma symptoms in people thousands of miles away.
The harder one works, the higher one’s “ventilation” – taking more air into the lungs, and potentially more allergens and pollutants.
Temperature and humidity also become risky at the extremes. Cold, dry air can dehydrate and constrict the airways, making it hard to breathe.
How to choose the best type of exercise
Step 1: Be realistic. People with asthma often have less exercise capacity than those who don’t – understandable when shortness of breath is the default setting.
Second, allow for plenty of time to warm up. A solid warm-up routine – particularly one with a mix of lower- and higher-intensity exercises – may help prevent exercise-induced bronchoconstriction causing shortness of breath and wheezing.
For example, warming up on a treadmill or exercise bike could be mixed with a few short bursts of faster running or cycling, with a couple of minutes of recovery at a slower pace in between.
That concept can be expanded into a full-blown workout.
High-intensity interval training (HIIT) is a promising option for people with asthma. A 2021 study showed that three 20-minute interval workouts per week significantly improved asthma control.
“The benefit of HIIT is that ventilation is able to recover intermittently,” said Carley O’Neill, PhD, an exercise scientist at Acadia University in Nova Scotia and the study’s lead author.
That’s a key difference from conventional cardio, where the constant exertion can evaporate water from the lungs faster than your body can replenish it. “Dehydrating of the airways can, in some, trigger exercise-induced asthma,” Dr. O’Neill said.
HIIT, conversely, allows the airways to recover and rehydrate between exercise bouts.
Another recent study found that people with asthma who did HIIT workouts had fewer breathing problems and felt less fatigued, compared with a matched group who did cardio training at a constant pace. (Both types of cardio led to similar improvements in aerobic fitness.)
Individuals can choose other types of intermittent exercise as well. Strength training, for example, requires relatively short periods of exertion, with plenty of rest in between.
The one choice you don’t want to make
While there are lots of good exercise options for someone with asthma, there’s one clearly bad choice, according to Dr. George: “Avoiding exercise.”
Being inactive puts one at higher risk for obesity and all the health problems that go with it. And allowing one’s fitness level to decline makes it much harder to move when one needs or wants to.
Any choice is better than that one.
A version of this article first appeared on WebMD.com.
Asthma is a sneaky foe.
But that doesn’t mean exercise should be avoided, she said.
Exercise, in fact, is one of the best ways to reduce asthma symptoms. Research over the past 2 decades has shown that physical activity can help improve lung function and boost quality of life for someone with asthma.
As their fitness improves, asthma patients report better sleep, reduced stress, improved weight control, and more days without symptoms. In some cases, they’re able to cut down their medication doses.
Exercise reduces inflammatory cytokines and increases anti-inflammatory cytokines, according to a 2023 review by researchers in the United Kingdom. That could help calm chronic airway inflammation, easing symptoms of asthma.
A few simple guidelines can help patients reap those benefits while staying safe.
Make sure the first steps aren’t the last steps
For someone who’s new to exercise, there’s only one way to begin: Carefully.
The Global Initiative for Asthma recommends twice-weekly cardio and strength training.
“You always start low and slow,” said Spencer Nadolsky, DO, a board-certified obesity and lipid specialist and medical director of Sequence, a comprehensive weight management program.
“Low” means light loads in the weight room. “Slow” means short, easy walks.
Many have been put “through the wringer” when starting out, discouraging them from continuing, Dr. Nadolsky said. “They were too sore, and it felt more like punishment.”
An even bigger concern is triggering an asthma attack. Patients should take steps to lower the risk by carrying their rescue inhalers and keeping up on medications, he added.
“A health care professional should be consulted” before the start of a new activity or ramping up a program, or anytime asthma interferes with a workout, Dr. George said.
Those who exercise outside need to be aware of the air quality, especially at a time when smoke and particulates from a wildfires in Canada can trigger asthma symptoms in people thousands of miles away.
The harder one works, the higher one’s “ventilation” – taking more air into the lungs, and potentially more allergens and pollutants.
Temperature and humidity also become risky at the extremes. Cold, dry air can dehydrate and constrict the airways, making it hard to breathe.
How to choose the best type of exercise
Step 1: Be realistic. People with asthma often have less exercise capacity than those who don’t – understandable when shortness of breath is the default setting.
Second, allow for plenty of time to warm up. A solid warm-up routine – particularly one with a mix of lower- and higher-intensity exercises – may help prevent exercise-induced bronchoconstriction causing shortness of breath and wheezing.
For example, warming up on a treadmill or exercise bike could be mixed with a few short bursts of faster running or cycling, with a couple of minutes of recovery at a slower pace in between.
That concept can be expanded into a full-blown workout.
High-intensity interval training (HIIT) is a promising option for people with asthma. A 2021 study showed that three 20-minute interval workouts per week significantly improved asthma control.
“The benefit of HIIT is that ventilation is able to recover intermittently,” said Carley O’Neill, PhD, an exercise scientist at Acadia University in Nova Scotia and the study’s lead author.
That’s a key difference from conventional cardio, where the constant exertion can evaporate water from the lungs faster than your body can replenish it. “Dehydrating of the airways can, in some, trigger exercise-induced asthma,” Dr. O’Neill said.
HIIT, conversely, allows the airways to recover and rehydrate between exercise bouts.
Another recent study found that people with asthma who did HIIT workouts had fewer breathing problems and felt less fatigued, compared with a matched group who did cardio training at a constant pace. (Both types of cardio led to similar improvements in aerobic fitness.)
Individuals can choose other types of intermittent exercise as well. Strength training, for example, requires relatively short periods of exertion, with plenty of rest in between.
The one choice you don’t want to make
While there are lots of good exercise options for someone with asthma, there’s one clearly bad choice, according to Dr. George: “Avoiding exercise.”
Being inactive puts one at higher risk for obesity and all the health problems that go with it. And allowing one’s fitness level to decline makes it much harder to move when one needs or wants to.
Any choice is better than that one.
A version of this article first appeared on WebMD.com.
Asthma is a sneaky foe.
But that doesn’t mean exercise should be avoided, she said.
Exercise, in fact, is one of the best ways to reduce asthma symptoms. Research over the past 2 decades has shown that physical activity can help improve lung function and boost quality of life for someone with asthma.
As their fitness improves, asthma patients report better sleep, reduced stress, improved weight control, and more days without symptoms. In some cases, they’re able to cut down their medication doses.
Exercise reduces inflammatory cytokines and increases anti-inflammatory cytokines, according to a 2023 review by researchers in the United Kingdom. That could help calm chronic airway inflammation, easing symptoms of asthma.
A few simple guidelines can help patients reap those benefits while staying safe.
Make sure the first steps aren’t the last steps
For someone who’s new to exercise, there’s only one way to begin: Carefully.
The Global Initiative for Asthma recommends twice-weekly cardio and strength training.
“You always start low and slow,” said Spencer Nadolsky, DO, a board-certified obesity and lipid specialist and medical director of Sequence, a comprehensive weight management program.
“Low” means light loads in the weight room. “Slow” means short, easy walks.
Many have been put “through the wringer” when starting out, discouraging them from continuing, Dr. Nadolsky said. “They were too sore, and it felt more like punishment.”
An even bigger concern is triggering an asthma attack. Patients should take steps to lower the risk by carrying their rescue inhalers and keeping up on medications, he added.
“A health care professional should be consulted” before the start of a new activity or ramping up a program, or anytime asthma interferes with a workout, Dr. George said.
Those who exercise outside need to be aware of the air quality, especially at a time when smoke and particulates from a wildfires in Canada can trigger asthma symptoms in people thousands of miles away.
The harder one works, the higher one’s “ventilation” – taking more air into the lungs, and potentially more allergens and pollutants.
Temperature and humidity also become risky at the extremes. Cold, dry air can dehydrate and constrict the airways, making it hard to breathe.
How to choose the best type of exercise
Step 1: Be realistic. People with asthma often have less exercise capacity than those who don’t – understandable when shortness of breath is the default setting.
Second, allow for plenty of time to warm up. A solid warm-up routine – particularly one with a mix of lower- and higher-intensity exercises – may help prevent exercise-induced bronchoconstriction causing shortness of breath and wheezing.
For example, warming up on a treadmill or exercise bike could be mixed with a few short bursts of faster running or cycling, with a couple of minutes of recovery at a slower pace in between.
That concept can be expanded into a full-blown workout.
High-intensity interval training (HIIT) is a promising option for people with asthma. A 2021 study showed that three 20-minute interval workouts per week significantly improved asthma control.
“The benefit of HIIT is that ventilation is able to recover intermittently,” said Carley O’Neill, PhD, an exercise scientist at Acadia University in Nova Scotia and the study’s lead author.
That’s a key difference from conventional cardio, where the constant exertion can evaporate water from the lungs faster than your body can replenish it. “Dehydrating of the airways can, in some, trigger exercise-induced asthma,” Dr. O’Neill said.
HIIT, conversely, allows the airways to recover and rehydrate between exercise bouts.
Another recent study found that people with asthma who did HIIT workouts had fewer breathing problems and felt less fatigued, compared with a matched group who did cardio training at a constant pace. (Both types of cardio led to similar improvements in aerobic fitness.)
Individuals can choose other types of intermittent exercise as well. Strength training, for example, requires relatively short periods of exertion, with plenty of rest in between.
The one choice you don’t want to make
While there are lots of good exercise options for someone with asthma, there’s one clearly bad choice, according to Dr. George: “Avoiding exercise.”
Being inactive puts one at higher risk for obesity and all the health problems that go with it. And allowing one’s fitness level to decline makes it much harder to move when one needs or wants to.
Any choice is better than that one.
A version of this article first appeared on WebMD.com.
The argument for grip strength as a vital sign
Most people hear “firm handshake” and automatically think “business world.” A cursory search reveals articles with titles like “Seven Super-Revealing Things Your Handshake Said About You” (Forbes) and “How a Handshake Can Tell You Everything You Need to Know About a Person” (Inc).
Those in the know, however, understand what a handshake really reveals: Current health and vitality. The amount of force that can be generated by the hand is a valid proxy for total-body strength. And total-body strength is one key to healthy aging.
Grip-strength testing is easy, fast, and noninvasive. It can be monitored over time. All it requires is a handgrip dynamometer, a tool that may cost less than a stethoscope, and a chair.
“Many studies have looked at strength as a predictor of positive health and weakness as a predictor of negative health outcomes,” said Mark Peterson, PhD, an associate professor at the University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, who’s worked on dozens of those studies.
Among the health risks associated with low grip strength: type 2 diabetes, heart disease, cancer, dementia and Alzheimer’s disease, depression, functional disability, osteoporosis, and premature death from any cause.
The prognostic merits of grip strength have been documented across continents and cultures. Although most of those studies have focused on older adults, they aren’t the only age group researchers have looked at.
“We have several papers on the value of grip strength for predicting diabetes and cardiovascular disease in children and adolescents,” Dr. Peterson said.
Survival of the strongest
The first thing to understand about grip-strength testing is that it’s only partially about grip. It’s mostly about strength. That’s what attracted Dr. Peterson to this line of research.
“I’m a former strength coach, so I wanted to make a case for why strength was important across populations, not just athletes,” he said. “I strongly believe in strength preservation and healthy living as a predictor for longevity.”
Consider a classic study of Swedish army recruits. Because of Sweden’s post–World War II conscription policy, virtually every young male in the country underwent a physical examination to see if they were fit for military service – an exam that included a grip-strength test.
That gave the researchers a database with more than a million participants. They followed up on them decades later through publicly available records.
What they found: The men with the weakest grip strength in their late teens were 20% more likely to have died by their mid-50s, compared with those with moderate to high grip strength. Even suicide rates were 20%-30% higher for the weakest recruits.
There’s a brutal Darwinian logic to the idea that a stronger person with a more powerful grip would enjoy a longer, healthier life. To our ancient ancestors, stronger hands meant they were probably better at everything that aided survival: hunting, fighting, building shelter, as well as bearing, transporting, and rearing children.
Fast forward to the 21st century where we must force ourselves to engage in physical activity. The old rules still apply: Strength aids survival.
Grip strength and the aging process
Some of the earliest grip-strength studies used it as a proxy for nutritional status in elderly men and women. Nourishment, in turn, predicted their ability to survive an illness or surgery.
Which makes sense; if an older person isn’t eating enough to maintain their health and vitality, their strength would decline. Declining strength would make them more susceptible to infections, hospitalizations, and postsurgical complications, leading to longer hospital stays, loss of independence, and ultimately a higher risk of death from any cause.
Along those lines, Dr. Peterson’s research team at the University of Michigan found that low grip strength is correlated with faster aging at the cellular level.
The study looked at DNA methylation, which Peterson describes as “a reflection of someone’s exposure to life events.”
For example, someone who smokes will have altered methylation patterns, compared with someone who doesn’t. Same with someone who’s had more exposure to environmental pollution.
Accelerated DNA methylation “means you’re essentially at higher risk for what are traditionally considered age-related chronic conditions,” Dr. Peterson said. Those conditions include Alzheimer’s, type 2 diabetes, chronic inflammation, and a higher risk for premature mortality.
Those things are also linked to low grip strength, which is linked to higher DNA methylation and faster biological aging.
But there’s still a missing piece of the puzzle: Why, exactly, would the strength of one’s grip be associated with so many health outcomes?
Grip strength and muscle function
“Declining muscle function is the first step of the disabling process,” said Ryan McGrath, PhD, an assistant professor at North Dakota State University, Fargo. “That’s what you can measure with a handgrip test. It helps you identify individuals at risk for the next step of the process, which is declines in physical performance.”
Dr. McGrath got involved in grip-strength research as a postdoctoral fellow at the University of Michigan, where he worked with Peterson. Like his mentor, he’s published multiple studies using data obtained with a handgrip dynamometer.
“It can be a nice tool for assessing muscle function and muscle strength,” he explained. Because the test is so easy to administer – you sit in a chair with your arm at your side and your elbow bent 90 degrees, and squeeze the device as hard as you can – researchers can work with large groups of study participants and come away with statistically powerful data.
“There are a lot of health outcomes it’s associated with,” Dr. McGrath added, “which is one of its greatest strengths and at the same time one of its key limitations.”
He compared the dynamometer with a tire gauge. Just as a tire gauge can alert you to a loss of air pressure without revealing the source of the leak, a dynamometer can’t tell you why your grip strength is deflated.
“It’s hard to specify the prognostic value,” he said. “You don’t know the next steps to take. As a standalone measurement, that’s a concern.”
That’s why his current research goes beyond simple tests of maximum grip strength to more sophisticated measurements of the rate of force development (how fast you can express strength), repeatability (how much your strength declines from your first to your second or third squeeze), and asymmetry (how big a gap there is between your right- and left-hand strength).
Any of those measures could detect a potential neural or neuromuscular issue.
In a 2020 study, for example, Dr. McGrath and his team at NDSU showed that older adults with both weakness and asymmetry in grip-strength tests were nearly four times more likely to experience functional limitations. Those limitations could affect their ability to do anything from routine chores to keeping themselves clean and fed.
Waging war on weakness
Using dynamometer readings, the generally accepted cutoffs for low grip strength are 26 kg for an adult male and 16 kg for a female.
But that’s way too simple, Dr. Peterson said.
For one thing, age matters. Grip strength typically peaks for men in their late 20s and declines rapidly in middle age and beyond. For women, it plateaus in their 20s and gently declines until their 50s. So, at minimum, the age-based standards included with a dynamometer should be consulted.
Another caveat: Dr. Peterson said grip strength tests aren’t very meaningful for people who actively train for strength, though he suggests dedicated athletes make up a relatively small percentage of the population – even as low as 10%.
The size of the person taking the test is also important.
“You absolutely must account for body mass in the context of understanding how grip strength, or any strength measure, is reflective of health and function,” Dr. Peterson said.
To calculate strength-weight ratio, which Dr. Peterson calls “normalized grip strength,” divide grip strength in kilograms by body weight in kilograms. For men, a ratio greater than 0.70 puts them in the higher percentiles. For women it’s 0.50.
And if the results suggest that the person in question is objectively weak? “For me, that’s easy,” Dr. Peterson said. “They need to exercise.”
Common sense suggests doing a lot of forearm exercises for grip strength. Not so, said Dr. Peterson. The strength of hand and forearm muscles reflects what they can do along with all other muscles moving together.
A 2019 study found that, for older adults, a variety of exercise programs can lead to modest but meaningful increases in participants’ grip strength – and they don’t necessarily have to include actual gripping exercises. The programs ranged from tai chi to water aerobics to walking, stretching, and all kinds of resistance training.
Dr. Peterson’s advice to everyone is pretty straightforward: Get stronger. It doesn’t really matter how you do it, or how much strength you ultimately gain. Even a little more strength means a little less weakness, and a little more life.
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
Most people hear “firm handshake” and automatically think “business world.” A cursory search reveals articles with titles like “Seven Super-Revealing Things Your Handshake Said About You” (Forbes) and “How a Handshake Can Tell You Everything You Need to Know About a Person” (Inc).
Those in the know, however, understand what a handshake really reveals: Current health and vitality. The amount of force that can be generated by the hand is a valid proxy for total-body strength. And total-body strength is one key to healthy aging.
Grip-strength testing is easy, fast, and noninvasive. It can be monitored over time. All it requires is a handgrip dynamometer, a tool that may cost less than a stethoscope, and a chair.
“Many studies have looked at strength as a predictor of positive health and weakness as a predictor of negative health outcomes,” said Mark Peterson, PhD, an associate professor at the University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, who’s worked on dozens of those studies.
Among the health risks associated with low grip strength: type 2 diabetes, heart disease, cancer, dementia and Alzheimer’s disease, depression, functional disability, osteoporosis, and premature death from any cause.
The prognostic merits of grip strength have been documented across continents and cultures. Although most of those studies have focused on older adults, they aren’t the only age group researchers have looked at.
“We have several papers on the value of grip strength for predicting diabetes and cardiovascular disease in children and adolescents,” Dr. Peterson said.
Survival of the strongest
The first thing to understand about grip-strength testing is that it’s only partially about grip. It’s mostly about strength. That’s what attracted Dr. Peterson to this line of research.
“I’m a former strength coach, so I wanted to make a case for why strength was important across populations, not just athletes,” he said. “I strongly believe in strength preservation and healthy living as a predictor for longevity.”
Consider a classic study of Swedish army recruits. Because of Sweden’s post–World War II conscription policy, virtually every young male in the country underwent a physical examination to see if they were fit for military service – an exam that included a grip-strength test.
That gave the researchers a database with more than a million participants. They followed up on them decades later through publicly available records.
What they found: The men with the weakest grip strength in their late teens were 20% more likely to have died by their mid-50s, compared with those with moderate to high grip strength. Even suicide rates were 20%-30% higher for the weakest recruits.
There’s a brutal Darwinian logic to the idea that a stronger person with a more powerful grip would enjoy a longer, healthier life. To our ancient ancestors, stronger hands meant they were probably better at everything that aided survival: hunting, fighting, building shelter, as well as bearing, transporting, and rearing children.
Fast forward to the 21st century where we must force ourselves to engage in physical activity. The old rules still apply: Strength aids survival.
Grip strength and the aging process
Some of the earliest grip-strength studies used it as a proxy for nutritional status in elderly men and women. Nourishment, in turn, predicted their ability to survive an illness or surgery.
Which makes sense; if an older person isn’t eating enough to maintain their health and vitality, their strength would decline. Declining strength would make them more susceptible to infections, hospitalizations, and postsurgical complications, leading to longer hospital stays, loss of independence, and ultimately a higher risk of death from any cause.
Along those lines, Dr. Peterson’s research team at the University of Michigan found that low grip strength is correlated with faster aging at the cellular level.
The study looked at DNA methylation, which Peterson describes as “a reflection of someone’s exposure to life events.”
For example, someone who smokes will have altered methylation patterns, compared with someone who doesn’t. Same with someone who’s had more exposure to environmental pollution.
Accelerated DNA methylation “means you’re essentially at higher risk for what are traditionally considered age-related chronic conditions,” Dr. Peterson said. Those conditions include Alzheimer’s, type 2 diabetes, chronic inflammation, and a higher risk for premature mortality.
Those things are also linked to low grip strength, which is linked to higher DNA methylation and faster biological aging.
But there’s still a missing piece of the puzzle: Why, exactly, would the strength of one’s grip be associated with so many health outcomes?
Grip strength and muscle function
“Declining muscle function is the first step of the disabling process,” said Ryan McGrath, PhD, an assistant professor at North Dakota State University, Fargo. “That’s what you can measure with a handgrip test. It helps you identify individuals at risk for the next step of the process, which is declines in physical performance.”
Dr. McGrath got involved in grip-strength research as a postdoctoral fellow at the University of Michigan, where he worked with Peterson. Like his mentor, he’s published multiple studies using data obtained with a handgrip dynamometer.
“It can be a nice tool for assessing muscle function and muscle strength,” he explained. Because the test is so easy to administer – you sit in a chair with your arm at your side and your elbow bent 90 degrees, and squeeze the device as hard as you can – researchers can work with large groups of study participants and come away with statistically powerful data.
“There are a lot of health outcomes it’s associated with,” Dr. McGrath added, “which is one of its greatest strengths and at the same time one of its key limitations.”
He compared the dynamometer with a tire gauge. Just as a tire gauge can alert you to a loss of air pressure without revealing the source of the leak, a dynamometer can’t tell you why your grip strength is deflated.
“It’s hard to specify the prognostic value,” he said. “You don’t know the next steps to take. As a standalone measurement, that’s a concern.”
That’s why his current research goes beyond simple tests of maximum grip strength to more sophisticated measurements of the rate of force development (how fast you can express strength), repeatability (how much your strength declines from your first to your second or third squeeze), and asymmetry (how big a gap there is between your right- and left-hand strength).
Any of those measures could detect a potential neural or neuromuscular issue.
In a 2020 study, for example, Dr. McGrath and his team at NDSU showed that older adults with both weakness and asymmetry in grip-strength tests were nearly four times more likely to experience functional limitations. Those limitations could affect their ability to do anything from routine chores to keeping themselves clean and fed.
Waging war on weakness
Using dynamometer readings, the generally accepted cutoffs for low grip strength are 26 kg for an adult male and 16 kg for a female.
But that’s way too simple, Dr. Peterson said.
For one thing, age matters. Grip strength typically peaks for men in their late 20s and declines rapidly in middle age and beyond. For women, it plateaus in their 20s and gently declines until their 50s. So, at minimum, the age-based standards included with a dynamometer should be consulted.
Another caveat: Dr. Peterson said grip strength tests aren’t very meaningful for people who actively train for strength, though he suggests dedicated athletes make up a relatively small percentage of the population – even as low as 10%.
The size of the person taking the test is also important.
“You absolutely must account for body mass in the context of understanding how grip strength, or any strength measure, is reflective of health and function,” Dr. Peterson said.
To calculate strength-weight ratio, which Dr. Peterson calls “normalized grip strength,” divide grip strength in kilograms by body weight in kilograms. For men, a ratio greater than 0.70 puts them in the higher percentiles. For women it’s 0.50.
And if the results suggest that the person in question is objectively weak? “For me, that’s easy,” Dr. Peterson said. “They need to exercise.”
Common sense suggests doing a lot of forearm exercises for grip strength. Not so, said Dr. Peterson. The strength of hand and forearm muscles reflects what they can do along with all other muscles moving together.
A 2019 study found that, for older adults, a variety of exercise programs can lead to modest but meaningful increases in participants’ grip strength – and they don’t necessarily have to include actual gripping exercises. The programs ranged from tai chi to water aerobics to walking, stretching, and all kinds of resistance training.
Dr. Peterson’s advice to everyone is pretty straightforward: Get stronger. It doesn’t really matter how you do it, or how much strength you ultimately gain. Even a little more strength means a little less weakness, and a little more life.
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
Most people hear “firm handshake” and automatically think “business world.” A cursory search reveals articles with titles like “Seven Super-Revealing Things Your Handshake Said About You” (Forbes) and “How a Handshake Can Tell You Everything You Need to Know About a Person” (Inc).
Those in the know, however, understand what a handshake really reveals: Current health and vitality. The amount of force that can be generated by the hand is a valid proxy for total-body strength. And total-body strength is one key to healthy aging.
Grip-strength testing is easy, fast, and noninvasive. It can be monitored over time. All it requires is a handgrip dynamometer, a tool that may cost less than a stethoscope, and a chair.
“Many studies have looked at strength as a predictor of positive health and weakness as a predictor of negative health outcomes,” said Mark Peterson, PhD, an associate professor at the University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, who’s worked on dozens of those studies.
Among the health risks associated with low grip strength: type 2 diabetes, heart disease, cancer, dementia and Alzheimer’s disease, depression, functional disability, osteoporosis, and premature death from any cause.
The prognostic merits of grip strength have been documented across continents and cultures. Although most of those studies have focused on older adults, they aren’t the only age group researchers have looked at.
“We have several papers on the value of grip strength for predicting diabetes and cardiovascular disease in children and adolescents,” Dr. Peterson said.
Survival of the strongest
The first thing to understand about grip-strength testing is that it’s only partially about grip. It’s mostly about strength. That’s what attracted Dr. Peterson to this line of research.
“I’m a former strength coach, so I wanted to make a case for why strength was important across populations, not just athletes,” he said. “I strongly believe in strength preservation and healthy living as a predictor for longevity.”
Consider a classic study of Swedish army recruits. Because of Sweden’s post–World War II conscription policy, virtually every young male in the country underwent a physical examination to see if they were fit for military service – an exam that included a grip-strength test.
That gave the researchers a database with more than a million participants. They followed up on them decades later through publicly available records.
What they found: The men with the weakest grip strength in their late teens were 20% more likely to have died by their mid-50s, compared with those with moderate to high grip strength. Even suicide rates were 20%-30% higher for the weakest recruits.
There’s a brutal Darwinian logic to the idea that a stronger person with a more powerful grip would enjoy a longer, healthier life. To our ancient ancestors, stronger hands meant they were probably better at everything that aided survival: hunting, fighting, building shelter, as well as bearing, transporting, and rearing children.
Fast forward to the 21st century where we must force ourselves to engage in physical activity. The old rules still apply: Strength aids survival.
Grip strength and the aging process
Some of the earliest grip-strength studies used it as a proxy for nutritional status in elderly men and women. Nourishment, in turn, predicted their ability to survive an illness or surgery.
Which makes sense; if an older person isn’t eating enough to maintain their health and vitality, their strength would decline. Declining strength would make them more susceptible to infections, hospitalizations, and postsurgical complications, leading to longer hospital stays, loss of independence, and ultimately a higher risk of death from any cause.
Along those lines, Dr. Peterson’s research team at the University of Michigan found that low grip strength is correlated with faster aging at the cellular level.
The study looked at DNA methylation, which Peterson describes as “a reflection of someone’s exposure to life events.”
For example, someone who smokes will have altered methylation patterns, compared with someone who doesn’t. Same with someone who’s had more exposure to environmental pollution.
Accelerated DNA methylation “means you’re essentially at higher risk for what are traditionally considered age-related chronic conditions,” Dr. Peterson said. Those conditions include Alzheimer’s, type 2 diabetes, chronic inflammation, and a higher risk for premature mortality.
Those things are also linked to low grip strength, which is linked to higher DNA methylation and faster biological aging.
But there’s still a missing piece of the puzzle: Why, exactly, would the strength of one’s grip be associated with so many health outcomes?
Grip strength and muscle function
“Declining muscle function is the first step of the disabling process,” said Ryan McGrath, PhD, an assistant professor at North Dakota State University, Fargo. “That’s what you can measure with a handgrip test. It helps you identify individuals at risk for the next step of the process, which is declines in physical performance.”
Dr. McGrath got involved in grip-strength research as a postdoctoral fellow at the University of Michigan, where he worked with Peterson. Like his mentor, he’s published multiple studies using data obtained with a handgrip dynamometer.
“It can be a nice tool for assessing muscle function and muscle strength,” he explained. Because the test is so easy to administer – you sit in a chair with your arm at your side and your elbow bent 90 degrees, and squeeze the device as hard as you can – researchers can work with large groups of study participants and come away with statistically powerful data.
“There are a lot of health outcomes it’s associated with,” Dr. McGrath added, “which is one of its greatest strengths and at the same time one of its key limitations.”
He compared the dynamometer with a tire gauge. Just as a tire gauge can alert you to a loss of air pressure without revealing the source of the leak, a dynamometer can’t tell you why your grip strength is deflated.
“It’s hard to specify the prognostic value,” he said. “You don’t know the next steps to take. As a standalone measurement, that’s a concern.”
That’s why his current research goes beyond simple tests of maximum grip strength to more sophisticated measurements of the rate of force development (how fast you can express strength), repeatability (how much your strength declines from your first to your second or third squeeze), and asymmetry (how big a gap there is between your right- and left-hand strength).
Any of those measures could detect a potential neural or neuromuscular issue.
In a 2020 study, for example, Dr. McGrath and his team at NDSU showed that older adults with both weakness and asymmetry in grip-strength tests were nearly four times more likely to experience functional limitations. Those limitations could affect their ability to do anything from routine chores to keeping themselves clean and fed.
Waging war on weakness
Using dynamometer readings, the generally accepted cutoffs for low grip strength are 26 kg for an adult male and 16 kg for a female.
But that’s way too simple, Dr. Peterson said.
For one thing, age matters. Grip strength typically peaks for men in their late 20s and declines rapidly in middle age and beyond. For women, it plateaus in their 20s and gently declines until their 50s. So, at minimum, the age-based standards included with a dynamometer should be consulted.
Another caveat: Dr. Peterson said grip strength tests aren’t very meaningful for people who actively train for strength, though he suggests dedicated athletes make up a relatively small percentage of the population – even as low as 10%.
The size of the person taking the test is also important.
“You absolutely must account for body mass in the context of understanding how grip strength, or any strength measure, is reflective of health and function,” Dr. Peterson said.
To calculate strength-weight ratio, which Dr. Peterson calls “normalized grip strength,” divide grip strength in kilograms by body weight in kilograms. For men, a ratio greater than 0.70 puts them in the higher percentiles. For women it’s 0.50.
And if the results suggest that the person in question is objectively weak? “For me, that’s easy,” Dr. Peterson said. “They need to exercise.”
Common sense suggests doing a lot of forearm exercises for grip strength. Not so, said Dr. Peterson. The strength of hand and forearm muscles reflects what they can do along with all other muscles moving together.
A 2019 study found that, for older adults, a variety of exercise programs can lead to modest but meaningful increases in participants’ grip strength – and they don’t necessarily have to include actual gripping exercises. The programs ranged from tai chi to water aerobics to walking, stretching, and all kinds of resistance training.
Dr. Peterson’s advice to everyone is pretty straightforward: Get stronger. It doesn’t really matter how you do it, or how much strength you ultimately gain. Even a little more strength means a little less weakness, and a little more life.
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
Get some exercise benefits without breaking a sweat
For as long as we’ve had official recommendations for exercise, those recommendations have focused on effort.
Do at least 150 minutes a week of “moderate to vigorous” physical activity, public health guidelines say. That could be anything from brisk walking (moderate) to competitive mountain-bike racing (vigorous).
But as broad as that spectrum is, it still leaves out a lot. Like washing dishes. Or changing a diaper. Or birdwatching in the park. Or giving a PowerPoint presentation.
All those tasks are “light” physical activities. We don’t think of them as exercise, and public health guidelines don’t account for them.
But at least one researcher believes we should take them more seriously.
said Andrew Agbaje, MD, a clinical epidemiologist at the University of Eastern Finland.
The high cost of not moving
Any parent, teacher, or caregiver can tell you that children slow down as they age. Youngsters who were bouncing off walls at 11 may move very little at 24. But it’s not necessarily their fault.
“We are more or less forcing them into sedentary behavior,” Dr. Agbaje said, pointing to things such as school, homework, and all the other situations that require young people to sit still. Their free time, in turn, increasingly involves screens, which keep them sitting even longer.
“We’re playing with a time bomb,” Dr. Agbaje said.
In a recent study of nearly 800 children, Dr. Agbaje measured how the children’s activity changed between the ages of 11 and 24.
The goal was to see how those changes affected their C-reactive protein.
Several findings stand out:
- The children’s moderate-to-vigorous activity was unchanged over time. It was about 60 minutes a day for males and 45 minutes a day for females at 11 and 24 years old.
- Light physical activity declined by about 3.5 hours a day.
- Sedentary behaviors – sitting, sleeping, or otherwise barely moving – increased by almost 3 hours a day.
- C-reactive protein increased significantly from age 15, when it was first measured, to 24. It nearly doubled in males and tripled in females.
While sedentariness was strongly linked to rising C-reactive protein, activity at any intensity was associated with lower inflammation.
But here’s an interesting wrinkle: The more body fat participants had, the less effective physical activity was in fighting inflammation. Body fat reduced the benefit of moderate-to-vigorous activity by close to 80%.
That wasn’t the case for light physical activity. Body fat mitigated just 30% of the benefit.
“Light physical activity looks like an unsung hero, which is surprising and new,” Dr. Agbaje said. “We might need to focus on that in this generation.”
The time-intensity continuum
That said, there are good reasons for public health guidelines to focus on higher intensities.
Take, for example, a study of Swedish military conscripts who underwent a battery of fitness tests in the early 1970s, when they were 18. Four decades later, those who had the highest exercise capacity in their late teens were 19% less likely to have subclinical levels of arterial plaque.
Higher exercise capacity is usually the result of higher-intensity exercise.
“The relationship between physical activity and exercise capacity is bidirectional and dynamic,” said study author Melony Fortuin-de Smidt, PhD, a postdoctoral researcher at Umeå University in Sweden.
In other words, what you can do now reflects what you did in the past, and what you do now will affect what you can do in the future – for better or for worse.
That’s not to say you can’t get the same benefit from lower-intensity activities. But there’s a catch: “You will need to do more,” Dr. Fortuin-de Smidt said.
In another recent study, Dr. Fortuin-de Smidt and coauthors calculated that you’d need 60 minutes of walking at a “normal” pace to get the same reduction in cardiovascular disease risk as you’d get from 40 minutes of brisk walking.
But those figures “should be interpreted cautiously,” since they include self-reported data, she said.
A 2019 study that used data from activity trackers came up with starkly different estimates: To get maximum protection from the risk of early death, you’d need 24 minutes a day of moderate-to-vigorous activity or 6-plus hours of light activity – “15 times longer to reap the same mortality benefits,” Dr. Fortuin-de Smidt said.
Notably, that study includes an in-between category the authors call “high” light physical activity. That could include low-intensity yoga or calisthenics, cooking or cleaning, and shopping or gardening. For those activities, you’d need just 75 minutes a day to get the same health benefits as 24 minutes of moderate-to-vigorous activity.
It’s worth mentioning that any of those activities could also be regular light or even moderate-to-vigorous, depending on how quickly or slowly you do them. Intensity is not about the activity type – it’s about the effort you put into doing it.
When light makes right
The message isn’t to obsessively categorize every movement into vigorous, moderate, “high” light, or regular light. Most of our activities probably include some combination.
The goal is to take more steps.
“Every move and every step counts towards better health,” Dr. Fortuin-de Smidt said.
Dr. Agbaje compares exercise to medicine. Each of us needs to adjust the exercise dose to fit our needs, goals, and abilities.
A tough workout for an average adult might qualify as a warm-up for a well-trained athlete, while the athlete’s warm-up might be dangerous for someone who’s not prepared for it.
That, Dr. Agbaje said, is the best argument for moving more whenever possible, even if it doesn’t feel like exercise.
“For everybody, light physical activity is safe,” he said. “Just go for a walk.”
A version of this article first appeared on WebMD.com.
For as long as we’ve had official recommendations for exercise, those recommendations have focused on effort.
Do at least 150 minutes a week of “moderate to vigorous” physical activity, public health guidelines say. That could be anything from brisk walking (moderate) to competitive mountain-bike racing (vigorous).
But as broad as that spectrum is, it still leaves out a lot. Like washing dishes. Or changing a diaper. Or birdwatching in the park. Or giving a PowerPoint presentation.
All those tasks are “light” physical activities. We don’t think of them as exercise, and public health guidelines don’t account for them.
But at least one researcher believes we should take them more seriously.
said Andrew Agbaje, MD, a clinical epidemiologist at the University of Eastern Finland.
The high cost of not moving
Any parent, teacher, or caregiver can tell you that children slow down as they age. Youngsters who were bouncing off walls at 11 may move very little at 24. But it’s not necessarily their fault.
“We are more or less forcing them into sedentary behavior,” Dr. Agbaje said, pointing to things such as school, homework, and all the other situations that require young people to sit still. Their free time, in turn, increasingly involves screens, which keep them sitting even longer.
“We’re playing with a time bomb,” Dr. Agbaje said.
In a recent study of nearly 800 children, Dr. Agbaje measured how the children’s activity changed between the ages of 11 and 24.
The goal was to see how those changes affected their C-reactive protein.
Several findings stand out:
- The children’s moderate-to-vigorous activity was unchanged over time. It was about 60 minutes a day for males and 45 minutes a day for females at 11 and 24 years old.
- Light physical activity declined by about 3.5 hours a day.
- Sedentary behaviors – sitting, sleeping, or otherwise barely moving – increased by almost 3 hours a day.
- C-reactive protein increased significantly from age 15, when it was first measured, to 24. It nearly doubled in males and tripled in females.
While sedentariness was strongly linked to rising C-reactive protein, activity at any intensity was associated with lower inflammation.
But here’s an interesting wrinkle: The more body fat participants had, the less effective physical activity was in fighting inflammation. Body fat reduced the benefit of moderate-to-vigorous activity by close to 80%.
That wasn’t the case for light physical activity. Body fat mitigated just 30% of the benefit.
“Light physical activity looks like an unsung hero, which is surprising and new,” Dr. Agbaje said. “We might need to focus on that in this generation.”
The time-intensity continuum
That said, there are good reasons for public health guidelines to focus on higher intensities.
Take, for example, a study of Swedish military conscripts who underwent a battery of fitness tests in the early 1970s, when they were 18. Four decades later, those who had the highest exercise capacity in their late teens were 19% less likely to have subclinical levels of arterial plaque.
Higher exercise capacity is usually the result of higher-intensity exercise.
“The relationship between physical activity and exercise capacity is bidirectional and dynamic,” said study author Melony Fortuin-de Smidt, PhD, a postdoctoral researcher at Umeå University in Sweden.
In other words, what you can do now reflects what you did in the past, and what you do now will affect what you can do in the future – for better or for worse.
That’s not to say you can’t get the same benefit from lower-intensity activities. But there’s a catch: “You will need to do more,” Dr. Fortuin-de Smidt said.
In another recent study, Dr. Fortuin-de Smidt and coauthors calculated that you’d need 60 minutes of walking at a “normal” pace to get the same reduction in cardiovascular disease risk as you’d get from 40 minutes of brisk walking.
But those figures “should be interpreted cautiously,” since they include self-reported data, she said.
A 2019 study that used data from activity trackers came up with starkly different estimates: To get maximum protection from the risk of early death, you’d need 24 minutes a day of moderate-to-vigorous activity or 6-plus hours of light activity – “15 times longer to reap the same mortality benefits,” Dr. Fortuin-de Smidt said.
Notably, that study includes an in-between category the authors call “high” light physical activity. That could include low-intensity yoga or calisthenics, cooking or cleaning, and shopping or gardening. For those activities, you’d need just 75 minutes a day to get the same health benefits as 24 minutes of moderate-to-vigorous activity.
It’s worth mentioning that any of those activities could also be regular light or even moderate-to-vigorous, depending on how quickly or slowly you do them. Intensity is not about the activity type – it’s about the effort you put into doing it.
When light makes right
The message isn’t to obsessively categorize every movement into vigorous, moderate, “high” light, or regular light. Most of our activities probably include some combination.
The goal is to take more steps.
“Every move and every step counts towards better health,” Dr. Fortuin-de Smidt said.
Dr. Agbaje compares exercise to medicine. Each of us needs to adjust the exercise dose to fit our needs, goals, and abilities.
A tough workout for an average adult might qualify as a warm-up for a well-trained athlete, while the athlete’s warm-up might be dangerous for someone who’s not prepared for it.
That, Dr. Agbaje said, is the best argument for moving more whenever possible, even if it doesn’t feel like exercise.
“For everybody, light physical activity is safe,” he said. “Just go for a walk.”
A version of this article first appeared on WebMD.com.
For as long as we’ve had official recommendations for exercise, those recommendations have focused on effort.
Do at least 150 minutes a week of “moderate to vigorous” physical activity, public health guidelines say. That could be anything from brisk walking (moderate) to competitive mountain-bike racing (vigorous).
But as broad as that spectrum is, it still leaves out a lot. Like washing dishes. Or changing a diaper. Or birdwatching in the park. Or giving a PowerPoint presentation.
All those tasks are “light” physical activities. We don’t think of them as exercise, and public health guidelines don’t account for them.
But at least one researcher believes we should take them more seriously.
said Andrew Agbaje, MD, a clinical epidemiologist at the University of Eastern Finland.
The high cost of not moving
Any parent, teacher, or caregiver can tell you that children slow down as they age. Youngsters who were bouncing off walls at 11 may move very little at 24. But it’s not necessarily their fault.
“We are more or less forcing them into sedentary behavior,” Dr. Agbaje said, pointing to things such as school, homework, and all the other situations that require young people to sit still. Their free time, in turn, increasingly involves screens, which keep them sitting even longer.
“We’re playing with a time bomb,” Dr. Agbaje said.
In a recent study of nearly 800 children, Dr. Agbaje measured how the children’s activity changed between the ages of 11 and 24.
The goal was to see how those changes affected their C-reactive protein.
Several findings stand out:
- The children’s moderate-to-vigorous activity was unchanged over time. It was about 60 minutes a day for males and 45 minutes a day for females at 11 and 24 years old.
- Light physical activity declined by about 3.5 hours a day.
- Sedentary behaviors – sitting, sleeping, or otherwise barely moving – increased by almost 3 hours a day.
- C-reactive protein increased significantly from age 15, when it was first measured, to 24. It nearly doubled in males and tripled in females.
While sedentariness was strongly linked to rising C-reactive protein, activity at any intensity was associated with lower inflammation.
But here’s an interesting wrinkle: The more body fat participants had, the less effective physical activity was in fighting inflammation. Body fat reduced the benefit of moderate-to-vigorous activity by close to 80%.
That wasn’t the case for light physical activity. Body fat mitigated just 30% of the benefit.
“Light physical activity looks like an unsung hero, which is surprising and new,” Dr. Agbaje said. “We might need to focus on that in this generation.”
The time-intensity continuum
That said, there are good reasons for public health guidelines to focus on higher intensities.
Take, for example, a study of Swedish military conscripts who underwent a battery of fitness tests in the early 1970s, when they were 18. Four decades later, those who had the highest exercise capacity in their late teens were 19% less likely to have subclinical levels of arterial plaque.
Higher exercise capacity is usually the result of higher-intensity exercise.
“The relationship between physical activity and exercise capacity is bidirectional and dynamic,” said study author Melony Fortuin-de Smidt, PhD, a postdoctoral researcher at Umeå University in Sweden.
In other words, what you can do now reflects what you did in the past, and what you do now will affect what you can do in the future – for better or for worse.
That’s not to say you can’t get the same benefit from lower-intensity activities. But there’s a catch: “You will need to do more,” Dr. Fortuin-de Smidt said.
In another recent study, Dr. Fortuin-de Smidt and coauthors calculated that you’d need 60 minutes of walking at a “normal” pace to get the same reduction in cardiovascular disease risk as you’d get from 40 minutes of brisk walking.
But those figures “should be interpreted cautiously,” since they include self-reported data, she said.
A 2019 study that used data from activity trackers came up with starkly different estimates: To get maximum protection from the risk of early death, you’d need 24 minutes a day of moderate-to-vigorous activity or 6-plus hours of light activity – “15 times longer to reap the same mortality benefits,” Dr. Fortuin-de Smidt said.
Notably, that study includes an in-between category the authors call “high” light physical activity. That could include low-intensity yoga or calisthenics, cooking or cleaning, and shopping or gardening. For those activities, you’d need just 75 minutes a day to get the same health benefits as 24 minutes of moderate-to-vigorous activity.
It’s worth mentioning that any of those activities could also be regular light or even moderate-to-vigorous, depending on how quickly or slowly you do them. Intensity is not about the activity type – it’s about the effort you put into doing it.
When light makes right
The message isn’t to obsessively categorize every movement into vigorous, moderate, “high” light, or regular light. Most of our activities probably include some combination.
The goal is to take more steps.
“Every move and every step counts towards better health,” Dr. Fortuin-de Smidt said.
Dr. Agbaje compares exercise to medicine. Each of us needs to adjust the exercise dose to fit our needs, goals, and abilities.
A tough workout for an average adult might qualify as a warm-up for a well-trained athlete, while the athlete’s warm-up might be dangerous for someone who’s not prepared for it.
That, Dr. Agbaje said, is the best argument for moving more whenever possible, even if it doesn’t feel like exercise.
“For everybody, light physical activity is safe,” he said. “Just go for a walk.”
A version of this article first appeared on WebMD.com.
Bad sleep cuts years off life, but exercise can save us
Experts recommend that most adults get 7-9 hours of sleep a night.
Plenty of research points to sleep and physical activity as crucial factors affecting life expectancy. Regular exercise can lengthen life, while too little or too much sleep may cut it short.
But evidence is growing that exercise may counteract the negative effects of poor sleep. A 2022 study found that being physically active for at least 25 minutes a day can erase the risk of early death associated with too much sleep or trouble falling asleep. And a 2021 study found that lower levels of physical activity may exacerbate the impact of poor sleep on early death, heart disease, and cancer.
The latest such study, published in the European Journal of Preventive Cardiology, suggests that higher volumes of exercise can virtually eliminate the risk of early death associated with sleeping too little or too long.
This study is unique, the researchers say, because it used accelerometers (motion-tracking sensors) to quantify sleep and physical activity. Other studies asked participants to report their own data, opening the door to false reports and mistakes.
Some 92,000 participants in the United Kingdom (mean age, 62 years; 56% women) wore the activity trackers for a week to measure how much they moved and slept. In the following 7 years, 3,080 participants died, mostly from cardiovascular disease or cancer.
As one might expect, the participants who were least likely to die also exercised the most and slept the “normal” amount (6-8 hours a night, as defined by the study).
Compared with that group, those who exercised the least and slept less than 6 hours were 2.5 times more likely to die during those 7 years (P < .001). Less active persons who got the recommended sleep were 79% more likely to die (P < .001). The risk was slightly higher than that for those who logged more than 8 hours a night.
But those risks disappeared for short- or long-sleeping participants who logged at least 150 minutes a week of moderate to vigorous activity.
“Exercise fights inflammatory and metabolic dysregulations and abnormal sympathetic nervous system activity,” said study author Jihui Zhang, PhD, of the Affiliated Brain Hospital of Guangzhou (China). Those problems are associated with cardiovascular diseases and other potentially fatal conditions.
More objective data – with tech
A study’s findings are only as good as the data it relies on. That’s why obtaining objective data not influenced by individual perception is key.
“Self-report questionnaires are prone to misperception, or recall or response bias,” Dr. Zhang explains.
Take sleep, for example. Research reveals that several factors can affect how we judge our sleep. When people have to sleep at irregular times, they often underestimate how many hours they sleep but overestimate how long they nap, found a study in the Journal of Clinical Sleep Medicine.
Another study showed that when people are under a lot of stress, they’ll report more sleep problems than they actually have, as revealed by an Actiheart monitor.
With exercise, participants often report doing more exercise, and doing it at a higher intensity, than objective measurements show they did. At the same time, self-reports typically don’t account for much of the unplanned, low-effort movement people do throughout the day.
Staying active when you’re tired
The study raises a practical question: If you don’t get the proper amount of sleep, how are you supposed to find the time, energy, and motivation to exercise?
The solution is to use one to fix the other.
Exercise and sleep have “a robust directional relationship,” Dr. Zhang said. Exercise improves sleep, while better sleep makes it easier to stick with an exercise program.
Ideally, that program will include a mix of cardio and resistance exercise, said Mitch Duncan, PhD, a professor of public health at the University of Newcastle, Australia.
As Dr. Duncan and his co-authors showed in a recent study, “the largest benefits to health occur when people do a combination of both aerobic and muscle-strengthening activity,” Dr. Duncan said.
“In terms of benefits to sleep, there doesn’t seem to be consistent evidence that favors either as being most effective.”
The timing or intensity of exercise doesn’t seem to matter much, either.
“But there is evidence that a greater duration contributes to larger improvements in sleep,” Dr. Duncan said.
In other words, longer workouts are generally better, but they don’t necessarily have to be super-intense.
The strongest evidence of all, however, shows that recent and regular exercise offer the biggest benefits at bedtime.
Today’s workout will improve tonight’s sleep. And the better you sleep tonight, the more likely you are to stick with the program.
A version of this article first appeared on WebMD.com.
Experts recommend that most adults get 7-9 hours of sleep a night.
Plenty of research points to sleep and physical activity as crucial factors affecting life expectancy. Regular exercise can lengthen life, while too little or too much sleep may cut it short.
But evidence is growing that exercise may counteract the negative effects of poor sleep. A 2022 study found that being physically active for at least 25 minutes a day can erase the risk of early death associated with too much sleep or trouble falling asleep. And a 2021 study found that lower levels of physical activity may exacerbate the impact of poor sleep on early death, heart disease, and cancer.
The latest such study, published in the European Journal of Preventive Cardiology, suggests that higher volumes of exercise can virtually eliminate the risk of early death associated with sleeping too little or too long.
This study is unique, the researchers say, because it used accelerometers (motion-tracking sensors) to quantify sleep and physical activity. Other studies asked participants to report their own data, opening the door to false reports and mistakes.
Some 92,000 participants in the United Kingdom (mean age, 62 years; 56% women) wore the activity trackers for a week to measure how much they moved and slept. In the following 7 years, 3,080 participants died, mostly from cardiovascular disease or cancer.
As one might expect, the participants who were least likely to die also exercised the most and slept the “normal” amount (6-8 hours a night, as defined by the study).
Compared with that group, those who exercised the least and slept less than 6 hours were 2.5 times more likely to die during those 7 years (P < .001). Less active persons who got the recommended sleep were 79% more likely to die (P < .001). The risk was slightly higher than that for those who logged more than 8 hours a night.
But those risks disappeared for short- or long-sleeping participants who logged at least 150 minutes a week of moderate to vigorous activity.
“Exercise fights inflammatory and metabolic dysregulations and abnormal sympathetic nervous system activity,” said study author Jihui Zhang, PhD, of the Affiliated Brain Hospital of Guangzhou (China). Those problems are associated with cardiovascular diseases and other potentially fatal conditions.
More objective data – with tech
A study’s findings are only as good as the data it relies on. That’s why obtaining objective data not influenced by individual perception is key.
“Self-report questionnaires are prone to misperception, or recall or response bias,” Dr. Zhang explains.
Take sleep, for example. Research reveals that several factors can affect how we judge our sleep. When people have to sleep at irregular times, they often underestimate how many hours they sleep but overestimate how long they nap, found a study in the Journal of Clinical Sleep Medicine.
Another study showed that when people are under a lot of stress, they’ll report more sleep problems than they actually have, as revealed by an Actiheart monitor.
With exercise, participants often report doing more exercise, and doing it at a higher intensity, than objective measurements show they did. At the same time, self-reports typically don’t account for much of the unplanned, low-effort movement people do throughout the day.
Staying active when you’re tired
The study raises a practical question: If you don’t get the proper amount of sleep, how are you supposed to find the time, energy, and motivation to exercise?
The solution is to use one to fix the other.
Exercise and sleep have “a robust directional relationship,” Dr. Zhang said. Exercise improves sleep, while better sleep makes it easier to stick with an exercise program.
Ideally, that program will include a mix of cardio and resistance exercise, said Mitch Duncan, PhD, a professor of public health at the University of Newcastle, Australia.
As Dr. Duncan and his co-authors showed in a recent study, “the largest benefits to health occur when people do a combination of both aerobic and muscle-strengthening activity,” Dr. Duncan said.
“In terms of benefits to sleep, there doesn’t seem to be consistent evidence that favors either as being most effective.”
The timing or intensity of exercise doesn’t seem to matter much, either.
“But there is evidence that a greater duration contributes to larger improvements in sleep,” Dr. Duncan said.
In other words, longer workouts are generally better, but they don’t necessarily have to be super-intense.
The strongest evidence of all, however, shows that recent and regular exercise offer the biggest benefits at bedtime.
Today’s workout will improve tonight’s sleep. And the better you sleep tonight, the more likely you are to stick with the program.
A version of this article first appeared on WebMD.com.
Experts recommend that most adults get 7-9 hours of sleep a night.
Plenty of research points to sleep and physical activity as crucial factors affecting life expectancy. Regular exercise can lengthen life, while too little or too much sleep may cut it short.
But evidence is growing that exercise may counteract the negative effects of poor sleep. A 2022 study found that being physically active for at least 25 minutes a day can erase the risk of early death associated with too much sleep or trouble falling asleep. And a 2021 study found that lower levels of physical activity may exacerbate the impact of poor sleep on early death, heart disease, and cancer.
The latest such study, published in the European Journal of Preventive Cardiology, suggests that higher volumes of exercise can virtually eliminate the risk of early death associated with sleeping too little or too long.
This study is unique, the researchers say, because it used accelerometers (motion-tracking sensors) to quantify sleep and physical activity. Other studies asked participants to report their own data, opening the door to false reports and mistakes.
Some 92,000 participants in the United Kingdom (mean age, 62 years; 56% women) wore the activity trackers for a week to measure how much they moved and slept. In the following 7 years, 3,080 participants died, mostly from cardiovascular disease or cancer.
As one might expect, the participants who were least likely to die also exercised the most and slept the “normal” amount (6-8 hours a night, as defined by the study).
Compared with that group, those who exercised the least and slept less than 6 hours were 2.5 times more likely to die during those 7 years (P < .001). Less active persons who got the recommended sleep were 79% more likely to die (P < .001). The risk was slightly higher than that for those who logged more than 8 hours a night.
But those risks disappeared for short- or long-sleeping participants who logged at least 150 minutes a week of moderate to vigorous activity.
“Exercise fights inflammatory and metabolic dysregulations and abnormal sympathetic nervous system activity,” said study author Jihui Zhang, PhD, of the Affiliated Brain Hospital of Guangzhou (China). Those problems are associated with cardiovascular diseases and other potentially fatal conditions.
More objective data – with tech
A study’s findings are only as good as the data it relies on. That’s why obtaining objective data not influenced by individual perception is key.
“Self-report questionnaires are prone to misperception, or recall or response bias,” Dr. Zhang explains.
Take sleep, for example. Research reveals that several factors can affect how we judge our sleep. When people have to sleep at irregular times, they often underestimate how many hours they sleep but overestimate how long they nap, found a study in the Journal of Clinical Sleep Medicine.
Another study showed that when people are under a lot of stress, they’ll report more sleep problems than they actually have, as revealed by an Actiheart monitor.
With exercise, participants often report doing more exercise, and doing it at a higher intensity, than objective measurements show they did. At the same time, self-reports typically don’t account for much of the unplanned, low-effort movement people do throughout the day.
Staying active when you’re tired
The study raises a practical question: If you don’t get the proper amount of sleep, how are you supposed to find the time, energy, and motivation to exercise?
The solution is to use one to fix the other.
Exercise and sleep have “a robust directional relationship,” Dr. Zhang said. Exercise improves sleep, while better sleep makes it easier to stick with an exercise program.
Ideally, that program will include a mix of cardio and resistance exercise, said Mitch Duncan, PhD, a professor of public health at the University of Newcastle, Australia.
As Dr. Duncan and his co-authors showed in a recent study, “the largest benefits to health occur when people do a combination of both aerobic and muscle-strengthening activity,” Dr. Duncan said.
“In terms of benefits to sleep, there doesn’t seem to be consistent evidence that favors either as being most effective.”
The timing or intensity of exercise doesn’t seem to matter much, either.
“But there is evidence that a greater duration contributes to larger improvements in sleep,” Dr. Duncan said.
In other words, longer workouts are generally better, but they don’t necessarily have to be super-intense.
The strongest evidence of all, however, shows that recent and regular exercise offer the biggest benefits at bedtime.
Today’s workout will improve tonight’s sleep. And the better you sleep tonight, the more likely you are to stick with the program.
A version of this article first appeared on WebMD.com.
FROM EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF PREVENTIVE CARDIOLOGY
Move faster, live longer? A little more effort goes a long way
If there’s one public health message Americans have heard loud and clear, it’s this one:
Move more.
Take more steps.
Spend more time doing physical activity – at least 150 minutes a week, according to the latest guidelines.
But hearing the message doesn’t mean we act on it. A whopping 25% of Americans don’t get any physical activity beyond what they do in their job, according to a CDC survey.
Just do what you’re already doing, but with a little more effort.
The study, which was published in the European Heart Journal, builds on growing evidence that suggests exercise intensity matters just as much as the amount. So, something as simple as turning a leisurely stroll into a brisk walk can, over time, lead to significant reductions in your risk of cardiovascular disease. No additional moves, steps, or minutes needed.
Step it up
Researchers at Cambridge University and the University of Leicester in England looked at data from 88,000 middle-aged adults who wore an activity tracking device for 7 days.
The devices tracked both the total amount of activity they did and the intensity of that movement – that is, how fast they walked or how hard they pushed themselves.
The researchers then calculated their physical activity energy expenditure (the number of calories they burned when they were up and moving) and the percentage that came from moderate to vigorous physical activity.
What’s the difference?
- Physical activity means any and every movement you do throughout the day. Mostly it’s mundane tasks like shopping, walking to the mailbox, playing with your dog, or cooking.
- Moderate-intensity physical activity includes things you do at a faster pace. Maybe you’re walking for exercise, doing yard work or household chores, or running late and just trying to get somewhere faster. You’re breathing a little harder and possibly working up a sweat.
- Vigorous-intensity physical activity is usually an exercise session – a run, a strenuous hike, a tough workout in the gym. It can also be an exhausting chore like shoveling snow, which feels like a workout. You’re definitely breathing harder, and you’re probably working up a sweat, even in the middle of winter.
Over the next 6 to 7 years, there were 4,000 new cases of cardiovascular disease among the people in the study.
Those who got at least 20% of their physical activity energy expenditure from moderate to vigorous activities had significantly less risk of heart disease, compared with those whose higher-effort activities were about 10%.
That was true even for those whose total activity was relatively low. As long as higher-effort activities reached 20% of their total, they were 14% less likely to be diagnosed with a heart condition.
And for those with relatively high activity levels, there was little extra benefit if their moderate and vigorous activities remained around 10%.
That finding surprised Paddy Dempsey, PhD, a medical research scientist at Cambridge and the study’s lead author. But it also makes sense.
“People can improve their cardiorespiratory fitness to a greater degree with higher-intensity activity,” he says. “More intensity will stress the system and lead to greater adaptation.”
The key is an increase in the amount of oxygen your heart and lungs can provide your muscles during exercise, a measure known as VO2max.
Raising your VO2max is the best way to reduce your risk of early death, especially death from heart disease. Simply moving up from the lowest conditioning category to a higher one will cut your risk of dying in any given year by as much as 60%.
Making strides
The study builds on previous research that shows the benefits of moving faster.
Walking faster will naturally increase your stride length, another predictor of longevity and future health. A review study published in 2021 found that older adults who took shorter steps were 26% more likely to have a disability, 34% more likely to have a major adverse event (like an injury that leads to a loss of independence), and 69% more likely to die over the next several years.
Quality versus quantity
We’ve focused so far on the quality of your physical activity – moving faster, taking longer strides.
But there’s still a lot to be said for movement quantity.
“It would be a mistake to say volume doesn’t matter,” Dr. Dempsey cautions.
A 2022 study in the journal The Lancet found that the risk of dying during a given period decreases with each increase in daily steps. The protective effect peaks at about 6,000 to 8,000 steps a day for adults 60 and over, and at 8,000 to 10,000 steps for those under 60.
“The relative value of the quality and quantity of exercise are very specific to a person’s goals,” says Chhanda Dutta, PhD, chief of the Clinical Gerontology Branch at the National Institute on Aging. “If performance is the goal, quality matters at least as much as quantity.”
Dr. Dempsey agrees that it’s not a cage match between two. Every step you take is a step in the right direction.
“People can choose or gravitate to an approach that works best for them,” he says. “It’s also helpful to think about where some everyday activities can be punctuated with intensity,” which could be as simple as walking faster when possible.
What matters most is that you choose something, Dr. Dutta says. “You have more to risk by not exercising.”
A version of this article first appeared on WebMD.com.
If there’s one public health message Americans have heard loud and clear, it’s this one:
Move more.
Take more steps.
Spend more time doing physical activity – at least 150 minutes a week, according to the latest guidelines.
But hearing the message doesn’t mean we act on it. A whopping 25% of Americans don’t get any physical activity beyond what they do in their job, according to a CDC survey.
Just do what you’re already doing, but with a little more effort.
The study, which was published in the European Heart Journal, builds on growing evidence that suggests exercise intensity matters just as much as the amount. So, something as simple as turning a leisurely stroll into a brisk walk can, over time, lead to significant reductions in your risk of cardiovascular disease. No additional moves, steps, or minutes needed.
Step it up
Researchers at Cambridge University and the University of Leicester in England looked at data from 88,000 middle-aged adults who wore an activity tracking device for 7 days.
The devices tracked both the total amount of activity they did and the intensity of that movement – that is, how fast they walked or how hard they pushed themselves.
The researchers then calculated their physical activity energy expenditure (the number of calories they burned when they were up and moving) and the percentage that came from moderate to vigorous physical activity.
What’s the difference?
- Physical activity means any and every movement you do throughout the day. Mostly it’s mundane tasks like shopping, walking to the mailbox, playing with your dog, or cooking.
- Moderate-intensity physical activity includes things you do at a faster pace. Maybe you’re walking for exercise, doing yard work or household chores, or running late and just trying to get somewhere faster. You’re breathing a little harder and possibly working up a sweat.
- Vigorous-intensity physical activity is usually an exercise session – a run, a strenuous hike, a tough workout in the gym. It can also be an exhausting chore like shoveling snow, which feels like a workout. You’re definitely breathing harder, and you’re probably working up a sweat, even in the middle of winter.
Over the next 6 to 7 years, there were 4,000 new cases of cardiovascular disease among the people in the study.
Those who got at least 20% of their physical activity energy expenditure from moderate to vigorous activities had significantly less risk of heart disease, compared with those whose higher-effort activities were about 10%.
That was true even for those whose total activity was relatively low. As long as higher-effort activities reached 20% of their total, they were 14% less likely to be diagnosed with a heart condition.
And for those with relatively high activity levels, there was little extra benefit if their moderate and vigorous activities remained around 10%.
That finding surprised Paddy Dempsey, PhD, a medical research scientist at Cambridge and the study’s lead author. But it also makes sense.
“People can improve their cardiorespiratory fitness to a greater degree with higher-intensity activity,” he says. “More intensity will stress the system and lead to greater adaptation.”
The key is an increase in the amount of oxygen your heart and lungs can provide your muscles during exercise, a measure known as VO2max.
Raising your VO2max is the best way to reduce your risk of early death, especially death from heart disease. Simply moving up from the lowest conditioning category to a higher one will cut your risk of dying in any given year by as much as 60%.
Making strides
The study builds on previous research that shows the benefits of moving faster.
Walking faster will naturally increase your stride length, another predictor of longevity and future health. A review study published in 2021 found that older adults who took shorter steps were 26% more likely to have a disability, 34% more likely to have a major adverse event (like an injury that leads to a loss of independence), and 69% more likely to die over the next several years.
Quality versus quantity
We’ve focused so far on the quality of your physical activity – moving faster, taking longer strides.
But there’s still a lot to be said for movement quantity.
“It would be a mistake to say volume doesn’t matter,” Dr. Dempsey cautions.
A 2022 study in the journal The Lancet found that the risk of dying during a given period decreases with each increase in daily steps. The protective effect peaks at about 6,000 to 8,000 steps a day for adults 60 and over, and at 8,000 to 10,000 steps for those under 60.
“The relative value of the quality and quantity of exercise are very specific to a person’s goals,” says Chhanda Dutta, PhD, chief of the Clinical Gerontology Branch at the National Institute on Aging. “If performance is the goal, quality matters at least as much as quantity.”
Dr. Dempsey agrees that it’s not a cage match between two. Every step you take is a step in the right direction.
“People can choose or gravitate to an approach that works best for them,” he says. “It’s also helpful to think about where some everyday activities can be punctuated with intensity,” which could be as simple as walking faster when possible.
What matters most is that you choose something, Dr. Dutta says. “You have more to risk by not exercising.”
A version of this article first appeared on WebMD.com.
If there’s one public health message Americans have heard loud and clear, it’s this one:
Move more.
Take more steps.
Spend more time doing physical activity – at least 150 minutes a week, according to the latest guidelines.
But hearing the message doesn’t mean we act on it. A whopping 25% of Americans don’t get any physical activity beyond what they do in their job, according to a CDC survey.
Just do what you’re already doing, but with a little more effort.
The study, which was published in the European Heart Journal, builds on growing evidence that suggests exercise intensity matters just as much as the amount. So, something as simple as turning a leisurely stroll into a brisk walk can, over time, lead to significant reductions in your risk of cardiovascular disease. No additional moves, steps, or minutes needed.
Step it up
Researchers at Cambridge University and the University of Leicester in England looked at data from 88,000 middle-aged adults who wore an activity tracking device for 7 days.
The devices tracked both the total amount of activity they did and the intensity of that movement – that is, how fast they walked or how hard they pushed themselves.
The researchers then calculated their physical activity energy expenditure (the number of calories they burned when they were up and moving) and the percentage that came from moderate to vigorous physical activity.
What’s the difference?
- Physical activity means any and every movement you do throughout the day. Mostly it’s mundane tasks like shopping, walking to the mailbox, playing with your dog, or cooking.
- Moderate-intensity physical activity includes things you do at a faster pace. Maybe you’re walking for exercise, doing yard work or household chores, or running late and just trying to get somewhere faster. You’re breathing a little harder and possibly working up a sweat.
- Vigorous-intensity physical activity is usually an exercise session – a run, a strenuous hike, a tough workout in the gym. It can also be an exhausting chore like shoveling snow, which feels like a workout. You’re definitely breathing harder, and you’re probably working up a sweat, even in the middle of winter.
Over the next 6 to 7 years, there were 4,000 new cases of cardiovascular disease among the people in the study.
Those who got at least 20% of their physical activity energy expenditure from moderate to vigorous activities had significantly less risk of heart disease, compared with those whose higher-effort activities were about 10%.
That was true even for those whose total activity was relatively low. As long as higher-effort activities reached 20% of their total, they were 14% less likely to be diagnosed with a heart condition.
And for those with relatively high activity levels, there was little extra benefit if their moderate and vigorous activities remained around 10%.
That finding surprised Paddy Dempsey, PhD, a medical research scientist at Cambridge and the study’s lead author. But it also makes sense.
“People can improve their cardiorespiratory fitness to a greater degree with higher-intensity activity,” he says. “More intensity will stress the system and lead to greater adaptation.”
The key is an increase in the amount of oxygen your heart and lungs can provide your muscles during exercise, a measure known as VO2max.
Raising your VO2max is the best way to reduce your risk of early death, especially death from heart disease. Simply moving up from the lowest conditioning category to a higher one will cut your risk of dying in any given year by as much as 60%.
Making strides
The study builds on previous research that shows the benefits of moving faster.
Walking faster will naturally increase your stride length, another predictor of longevity and future health. A review study published in 2021 found that older adults who took shorter steps were 26% more likely to have a disability, 34% more likely to have a major adverse event (like an injury that leads to a loss of independence), and 69% more likely to die over the next several years.
Quality versus quantity
We’ve focused so far on the quality of your physical activity – moving faster, taking longer strides.
But there’s still a lot to be said for movement quantity.
“It would be a mistake to say volume doesn’t matter,” Dr. Dempsey cautions.
A 2022 study in the journal The Lancet found that the risk of dying during a given period decreases with each increase in daily steps. The protective effect peaks at about 6,000 to 8,000 steps a day for adults 60 and over, and at 8,000 to 10,000 steps for those under 60.
“The relative value of the quality and quantity of exercise are very specific to a person’s goals,” says Chhanda Dutta, PhD, chief of the Clinical Gerontology Branch at the National Institute on Aging. “If performance is the goal, quality matters at least as much as quantity.”
Dr. Dempsey agrees that it’s not a cage match between two. Every step you take is a step in the right direction.
“People can choose or gravitate to an approach that works best for them,” he says. “It’s also helpful to think about where some everyday activities can be punctuated with intensity,” which could be as simple as walking faster when possible.
What matters most is that you choose something, Dr. Dutta says. “You have more to risk by not exercising.”
A version of this article first appeared on WebMD.com.
FROM EUROPEAN HEART JOURNAL
How strength training can help you live longer
People who lift weights understand they’re playing a long game.
Once they get past the “newbie gains” – the quick and exciting increases in muscle strength and size – it takes time, effort, and patience to keep making progress.
Whether they know it or not, they’re also playing the longevity game.
A growing body of research shows that resistance training adds years to both lifespan and “healthspan” – the period of life when we’re in good health.
A 2022 study review from Japanese researchers linked “muscle-strengthening activities” to a 15% lower risk of all-cause mortality.
Resistance exercise was also linked to a lower risk of cardiovascular disease (17%), cancer (12%), and diabetes (17%).
We’ve known for a long time that strength is an excellent predictor of future health. Lots of research has shown that, if all else is equal, stronger men and women have a much lower risk of dying during a given period than people with less strength.
This new research shows that strength training offers similar protection, regardless of the results of that training. So even if you don’t think you’re getting as strong or as lean as you’d like to be, you should keep it up – because chances are, you’re still helping your health in a big way.
How strength training helps as you age
For longevity, strength training seems to be especially effective for older adults, says Roger Fielding, PhD, of Tufts University Medford, Mass., who’s been studying the role of exercise in the aging process since the early 1990s.
“With aging, we see clear deficits in muscle function and bone health,” he says. “That all can be slowed, attenuated, or reversed with appropriate exercise.”
His concept of “appropriate” has changed a lot in the past 3 decades. “When I first started studying this stuff, we would try to give people a very formalized prescription” for strength training, he says.
That strength-training prescription typically included a lot of sets (three per exercise), moderate reps (8-12 per set), and relatively heavy weights. It also required professional supervision in a well-equipped gym, which was both unappealing and impractical for most of the target population.
“What I’ve learned is that even lower-intensity strength training, at home, without a lot of specialized equipment, has some benefits,” he says.
Which benefits? That’s harder to say.
The research linking resistance exercise to lower mortality comes from large, population-wide surveys, looking at tens or even hundreds of thousands of people. The broad category of “muscle-strengthening exercises” can include anything from calisthenics in the living room to a serious bodybuilding or power-lifting program.
They’re also based on self-reporting by the people studied. Because of that, “we should be careful how we interpret some of these studies,” Dr. Fielding says.
How much strength training should you do?
That warning seems especially appropriate for the study’s most surprising conclusion: The maximum longevity benefit comes from one or two resistance exercise sessions a week totaling 30-60 minutes.
The study adds that it’s unclear why more strength training would have diminishing or even negative returns.
Robert Linkul, owner of Training the Older Adult in Shingle Springs, Calif., thinks the answer is perfectly clear.
“Less might be more for the beginning lifter,” he says. That’s why his new clients typically begin with two 50-minute workouts a week. But after 3 months, they need to train three times a week to continue seeing gains.
He currently has 14 clients who have been with him at least 16 years. Most of them started in their 50s and are now in their 60s or 70s. If there were any downside to working out more than two times a week, he’s pretty sure he would’ve seen it by now.
Live longer and move longer, too
Mr. Linkul says that his training program includes a lot more than lifting. Clients start each workout with 10-15 minutes of mobility and warm-up exercises. That’s followed by 15 minutes of strength training and 15 minutes of high-intensity resistance training (HIRT).
HIRT uses functional exercises – lifting and carrying dumbbells or kettlebells; pushing or pulling a weighted sled – to improve strength and endurance at the same time.
“Most of the clients I get are training for real-life function,” Mr. Linkul says.
Falling is one of their biggest concerns, and for good reason: According to the World Health Organization, it’s the second-leading cause of unintentional injury–related deaths worldwide, behind only traffic accidents.
Their other major concern is losing their independence, which often follows a fall. “They want to feel they’re not near using a cane or a walker or being stuck in a wheelchair,” he says. “The more we train, the further we get from that.”
That’s where strength training offers its most unique advantages, according to a 2019 study from researchers at McMaster University, Hamilton, Ont. Resistance exercise is “particularly potent for maintaining mobility in older adults,” the study says.
Training for life
Traditional aerobic exercise also offers many of the same benefits, including longer life and a lower risk of cardiovascular disease, cancer, and diabetes.
But there’s no need to choose one or the other. As a recent study) noted, combining aerobic and strength exercises leads to a lower risk of early death than either of them separately.
Which makes perfect sense to Dr. Fielding.
“Usually, people who’re physically active aren’t just doing strength training alone,” he says. “Some exercise is better than no exercise,” and more is usually better than less. “People have to find things they like to do and want to do and are able to do consistently.”
A version of this article first appeared on WebMD.com.
People who lift weights understand they’re playing a long game.
Once they get past the “newbie gains” – the quick and exciting increases in muscle strength and size – it takes time, effort, and patience to keep making progress.
Whether they know it or not, they’re also playing the longevity game.
A growing body of research shows that resistance training adds years to both lifespan and “healthspan” – the period of life when we’re in good health.
A 2022 study review from Japanese researchers linked “muscle-strengthening activities” to a 15% lower risk of all-cause mortality.
Resistance exercise was also linked to a lower risk of cardiovascular disease (17%), cancer (12%), and diabetes (17%).
We’ve known for a long time that strength is an excellent predictor of future health. Lots of research has shown that, if all else is equal, stronger men and women have a much lower risk of dying during a given period than people with less strength.
This new research shows that strength training offers similar protection, regardless of the results of that training. So even if you don’t think you’re getting as strong or as lean as you’d like to be, you should keep it up – because chances are, you’re still helping your health in a big way.
How strength training helps as you age
For longevity, strength training seems to be especially effective for older adults, says Roger Fielding, PhD, of Tufts University Medford, Mass., who’s been studying the role of exercise in the aging process since the early 1990s.
“With aging, we see clear deficits in muscle function and bone health,” he says. “That all can be slowed, attenuated, or reversed with appropriate exercise.”
His concept of “appropriate” has changed a lot in the past 3 decades. “When I first started studying this stuff, we would try to give people a very formalized prescription” for strength training, he says.
That strength-training prescription typically included a lot of sets (three per exercise), moderate reps (8-12 per set), and relatively heavy weights. It also required professional supervision in a well-equipped gym, which was both unappealing and impractical for most of the target population.
“What I’ve learned is that even lower-intensity strength training, at home, without a lot of specialized equipment, has some benefits,” he says.
Which benefits? That’s harder to say.
The research linking resistance exercise to lower mortality comes from large, population-wide surveys, looking at tens or even hundreds of thousands of people. The broad category of “muscle-strengthening exercises” can include anything from calisthenics in the living room to a serious bodybuilding or power-lifting program.
They’re also based on self-reporting by the people studied. Because of that, “we should be careful how we interpret some of these studies,” Dr. Fielding says.
How much strength training should you do?
That warning seems especially appropriate for the study’s most surprising conclusion: The maximum longevity benefit comes from one or two resistance exercise sessions a week totaling 30-60 minutes.
The study adds that it’s unclear why more strength training would have diminishing or even negative returns.
Robert Linkul, owner of Training the Older Adult in Shingle Springs, Calif., thinks the answer is perfectly clear.
“Less might be more for the beginning lifter,” he says. That’s why his new clients typically begin with two 50-minute workouts a week. But after 3 months, they need to train three times a week to continue seeing gains.
He currently has 14 clients who have been with him at least 16 years. Most of them started in their 50s and are now in their 60s or 70s. If there were any downside to working out more than two times a week, he’s pretty sure he would’ve seen it by now.
Live longer and move longer, too
Mr. Linkul says that his training program includes a lot more than lifting. Clients start each workout with 10-15 minutes of mobility and warm-up exercises. That’s followed by 15 minutes of strength training and 15 minutes of high-intensity resistance training (HIRT).
HIRT uses functional exercises – lifting and carrying dumbbells or kettlebells; pushing or pulling a weighted sled – to improve strength and endurance at the same time.
“Most of the clients I get are training for real-life function,” Mr. Linkul says.
Falling is one of their biggest concerns, and for good reason: According to the World Health Organization, it’s the second-leading cause of unintentional injury–related deaths worldwide, behind only traffic accidents.
Their other major concern is losing their independence, which often follows a fall. “They want to feel they’re not near using a cane or a walker or being stuck in a wheelchair,” he says. “The more we train, the further we get from that.”
That’s where strength training offers its most unique advantages, according to a 2019 study from researchers at McMaster University, Hamilton, Ont. Resistance exercise is “particularly potent for maintaining mobility in older adults,” the study says.
Training for life
Traditional aerobic exercise also offers many of the same benefits, including longer life and a lower risk of cardiovascular disease, cancer, and diabetes.
But there’s no need to choose one or the other. As a recent study) noted, combining aerobic and strength exercises leads to a lower risk of early death than either of them separately.
Which makes perfect sense to Dr. Fielding.
“Usually, people who’re physically active aren’t just doing strength training alone,” he says. “Some exercise is better than no exercise,” and more is usually better than less. “People have to find things they like to do and want to do and are able to do consistently.”
A version of this article first appeared on WebMD.com.
People who lift weights understand they’re playing a long game.
Once they get past the “newbie gains” – the quick and exciting increases in muscle strength and size – it takes time, effort, and patience to keep making progress.
Whether they know it or not, they’re also playing the longevity game.
A growing body of research shows that resistance training adds years to both lifespan and “healthspan” – the period of life when we’re in good health.
A 2022 study review from Japanese researchers linked “muscle-strengthening activities” to a 15% lower risk of all-cause mortality.
Resistance exercise was also linked to a lower risk of cardiovascular disease (17%), cancer (12%), and diabetes (17%).
We’ve known for a long time that strength is an excellent predictor of future health. Lots of research has shown that, if all else is equal, stronger men and women have a much lower risk of dying during a given period than people with less strength.
This new research shows that strength training offers similar protection, regardless of the results of that training. So even if you don’t think you’re getting as strong or as lean as you’d like to be, you should keep it up – because chances are, you’re still helping your health in a big way.
How strength training helps as you age
For longevity, strength training seems to be especially effective for older adults, says Roger Fielding, PhD, of Tufts University Medford, Mass., who’s been studying the role of exercise in the aging process since the early 1990s.
“With aging, we see clear deficits in muscle function and bone health,” he says. “That all can be slowed, attenuated, or reversed with appropriate exercise.”
His concept of “appropriate” has changed a lot in the past 3 decades. “When I first started studying this stuff, we would try to give people a very formalized prescription” for strength training, he says.
That strength-training prescription typically included a lot of sets (three per exercise), moderate reps (8-12 per set), and relatively heavy weights. It also required professional supervision in a well-equipped gym, which was both unappealing and impractical for most of the target population.
“What I’ve learned is that even lower-intensity strength training, at home, without a lot of specialized equipment, has some benefits,” he says.
Which benefits? That’s harder to say.
The research linking resistance exercise to lower mortality comes from large, population-wide surveys, looking at tens or even hundreds of thousands of people. The broad category of “muscle-strengthening exercises” can include anything from calisthenics in the living room to a serious bodybuilding or power-lifting program.
They’re also based on self-reporting by the people studied. Because of that, “we should be careful how we interpret some of these studies,” Dr. Fielding says.
How much strength training should you do?
That warning seems especially appropriate for the study’s most surprising conclusion: The maximum longevity benefit comes from one or two resistance exercise sessions a week totaling 30-60 minutes.
The study adds that it’s unclear why more strength training would have diminishing or even negative returns.
Robert Linkul, owner of Training the Older Adult in Shingle Springs, Calif., thinks the answer is perfectly clear.
“Less might be more for the beginning lifter,” he says. That’s why his new clients typically begin with two 50-minute workouts a week. But after 3 months, they need to train three times a week to continue seeing gains.
He currently has 14 clients who have been with him at least 16 years. Most of them started in their 50s and are now in their 60s or 70s. If there were any downside to working out more than two times a week, he’s pretty sure he would’ve seen it by now.
Live longer and move longer, too
Mr. Linkul says that his training program includes a lot more than lifting. Clients start each workout with 10-15 minutes of mobility and warm-up exercises. That’s followed by 15 minutes of strength training and 15 minutes of high-intensity resistance training (HIRT).
HIRT uses functional exercises – lifting and carrying dumbbells or kettlebells; pushing or pulling a weighted sled – to improve strength and endurance at the same time.
“Most of the clients I get are training for real-life function,” Mr. Linkul says.
Falling is one of their biggest concerns, and for good reason: According to the World Health Organization, it’s the second-leading cause of unintentional injury–related deaths worldwide, behind only traffic accidents.
Their other major concern is losing their independence, which often follows a fall. “They want to feel they’re not near using a cane or a walker or being stuck in a wheelchair,” he says. “The more we train, the further we get from that.”
That’s where strength training offers its most unique advantages, according to a 2019 study from researchers at McMaster University, Hamilton, Ont. Resistance exercise is “particularly potent for maintaining mobility in older adults,” the study says.
Training for life
Traditional aerobic exercise also offers many of the same benefits, including longer life and a lower risk of cardiovascular disease, cancer, and diabetes.
But there’s no need to choose one or the other. As a recent study) noted, combining aerobic and strength exercises leads to a lower risk of early death than either of them separately.
Which makes perfect sense to Dr. Fielding.
“Usually, people who’re physically active aren’t just doing strength training alone,” he says. “Some exercise is better than no exercise,” and more is usually better than less. “People have to find things they like to do and want to do and are able to do consistently.”
A version of this article first appeared on WebMD.com.
Why exercise doesn’t help people with long COVID
When Joel Fram woke up on the morning of March 12, 2020, he had a pretty good idea why he felt so lousy.
He lives in New York, where the first wave of the coronavirus was tearing through the city. “I instantly knew,” said the 55-year-old Broadway music director. It was COVID-19.
What started with a general sense of having been hit by a truck soon included a sore throat and such severe fatigue that he once fell asleep in the middle of sending a text to his sister. The final symptoms were chest tightness and trouble breathing.
And then he started to feel better. “By mid-April, my body was feeling essentially back to normal,” he said.
So he did what would have been smart after almost any other illness: He began working out. That didn’t last long. “It felt like someone pulled the carpet out from under me,” he remembered. “I couldn’t walk three blocks without getting breathless and fatigued.”
That was the first indication Mr. Fram had long COVID.
According to the National Center for Health Statistics, at least 7.5% of American adults – close to 20 million people – have symptoms of long COVID.
COVID-19 patients who had the most severe illness will struggle the most with exercise later, according to a review published in June from researchers at the University of California, San Francisco. But even people with mild symptoms can struggle to regain their previous levels of fitness.
“We have participants in our study who had relatively mild acute symptoms and went on to have really profound decreases in their ability to exercise,” said Matthew S. Durstenfeld, MD, a cardiologist at UCSF and principal author of the review.
Most people with long COVID will have lower-than-expected scores on tests of aerobic fitness, as shown by Yale researchers in a study published in August 2021.
“Some amount of that is due to deconditioning,” Dr. Durstenfeld said. “You’re not feeling well, so you’re not exercising to the same degree you might have been before you got infected.”
In a study published in April, people with long COVID told researchers at Britain’s University of Leeds they spent 93% less time in physical activity than they did before their infection.
But multiple studies have found deconditioning is not entirely – or even mostly – to blame.
A 2021 study found that 89% of participants with long COVID had postexertional malaise (PEM), which happens when a patient’s symptoms get worse after they do even minor physical or mental activities. According to the CDC, postexertional malaise can hit as long as 12-48 hours after the activity, and it can take people up to 2 weeks to fully recover.
Unfortunately, the advice patients get from their doctors sometimes makes the problem worse.
How long COVID defies simple solutions
Long COVID is a “dynamic disability” that requires health professionals to go off script when a patient’s symptoms don’t respond in a predictable way to treatment, said David Putrino, PhD, a neuroscientist, physical therapist, and director of rehabilitation innovation for the Mount Sinai Health System in New York.
“We’re not so good at dealing with somebody who, for all intents and purposes, can appear healthy and nondisabled on one day and be completely debilitated the next day,” he said.
Dr. Putrino said more than half of his clinic’s long-COVID patients told his team they had at least one of these persistent problems:
- Fatigue (82%).
- Brain fog (67%).
- Headache (60%).
- Sleep problems (59%).
- Dizziness (54%).
And 86% said exercise worsened their symptoms.
The symptoms are similar to what doctors see with illnesses such as lupus, Lyme disease, and chronic fatigue syndrome – something many experts compare long COVID to. Researchers and medical professionals still don’t know exactly how COVID-19 causes those symptoms. But there are some theories.
Potential causes of long-COVID symptoms
Dr. Putrino said it is possible the virus enters a patient’s cells and hijacks the mitochondria – a part of the cell that provides energy. It can linger there for weeks or months – something known as viral persistence.
“All of a sudden, the body’s getting less energy for itself, even though it’s producing the same amount, or even a little more,” he said. And there is a consequence to this extra stress on the cells. “Creating energy isn’t free. You’re producing more waste products, which puts your body in a state of oxidative stress,” Dr. Putrino said. Oxidative stress damages cells as molecules interact with oxygen in harmful ways.
“The other big mechanism is autonomic dysfunction,” Dr. Putrino said. It’s marked by breathing problems, heart palpitations, and other glitches in areas most healthy people never have to think about. About 70% of long-COVID patients at Mount Sinai’s clinic have some degree of autonomic dysfunction, he said.
For a person with autonomic dysfunction, something as basic as changing posture can trigger a storm of cytokines, a chemical messenger that tells the immune system where and how to respond to challenges like an injury or infection.
“Suddenly, you have this on-off switch,” Dr. Putrino said. “You go straight to ‘fight or flight,’ ” with a surge of adrenaline and a spiking heart rate, “then plunge back to ‘rest or digest.’ You go from fired up to so sleepy, you can’t keep your eyes open.”
A patient with viral persistence and one with autonomic dysfunction may have the same negative reaction to exercise, even though the triggers are completely different.
So how can doctors help long-COVID patients?
The first step, Dr. Putrino said, is to understand the difference between long COVID and a long recovery from COVID-19 infection.
Many of the patients in the latter group still have symptoms 4 weeks after their first infection. “At 4 weeks, yeah, they’re still feeling symptoms, but that’s not long COVID,” he said. “That’s just taking a while to get over a viral infection.”
Fitness advice is simple for those people: Take it easy at first, and gradually increase the amount and intensity of aerobic exercise and strength training.
But that advice would be disastrous for someone who meets Dr. Putrino’s stricter definition of long COVID: “Three to 4 months out from initial infection, they’re experiencing severe fatigue, exertional symptoms, cognitive symptoms, heart palpitations, shortness of breath,” he said.
“Our clinic is extraordinarily cautious with exercise” for those patients, he said.
In Dr. Putrino’s experience, about 20%-30% of patients will make significant progress after 12 weeks. “They’re feeling more or less like they felt pre-COVID,” he said.
The unluckiest 10%-20% won’t make any progress at all. Any type of therapy, even if it’s as simple as moving their legs from a flat position, worsens their symptoms.
The majority – 50%-60% – will have some improvement in their symptoms. But then progress will stop, for reasons researchers are still trying to figure out.
“My sense is that gradually increasing your exercise is still good advice for the vast majority of people,” UCSF’s Dr. Durstenfeld said.
Ideally, that exercise will be supervised by someone trained in cardiac, pulmonary, and/or autonomic rehabilitation – a specialized type of therapy aimed at resyncing the autonomic nervous system that governs breathing and other unconscious functions, he said. But those therapies are rarely covered by insurance, which means most long-COVID patients are on their own.
Dr. Durstenfeld said it’s important that patients keep trying and not give up. “With slow and steady progress, a lot of people can get profoundly better,” he said.
Mr. Fram, who’s worked with careful supervision, says he’s getting closer to something like his pre-COVID-19 life.
But he’s not there yet. Long COVID, he said, “affects my life every single day.”
A version of this article first appeared on WebMD.com.
When Joel Fram woke up on the morning of March 12, 2020, he had a pretty good idea why he felt so lousy.
He lives in New York, where the first wave of the coronavirus was tearing through the city. “I instantly knew,” said the 55-year-old Broadway music director. It was COVID-19.
What started with a general sense of having been hit by a truck soon included a sore throat and such severe fatigue that he once fell asleep in the middle of sending a text to his sister. The final symptoms were chest tightness and trouble breathing.
And then he started to feel better. “By mid-April, my body was feeling essentially back to normal,” he said.
So he did what would have been smart after almost any other illness: He began working out. That didn’t last long. “It felt like someone pulled the carpet out from under me,” he remembered. “I couldn’t walk three blocks without getting breathless and fatigued.”
That was the first indication Mr. Fram had long COVID.
According to the National Center for Health Statistics, at least 7.5% of American adults – close to 20 million people – have symptoms of long COVID.
COVID-19 patients who had the most severe illness will struggle the most with exercise later, according to a review published in June from researchers at the University of California, San Francisco. But even people with mild symptoms can struggle to regain their previous levels of fitness.
“We have participants in our study who had relatively mild acute symptoms and went on to have really profound decreases in their ability to exercise,” said Matthew S. Durstenfeld, MD, a cardiologist at UCSF and principal author of the review.
Most people with long COVID will have lower-than-expected scores on tests of aerobic fitness, as shown by Yale researchers in a study published in August 2021.
“Some amount of that is due to deconditioning,” Dr. Durstenfeld said. “You’re not feeling well, so you’re not exercising to the same degree you might have been before you got infected.”
In a study published in April, people with long COVID told researchers at Britain’s University of Leeds they spent 93% less time in physical activity than they did before their infection.
But multiple studies have found deconditioning is not entirely – or even mostly – to blame.
A 2021 study found that 89% of participants with long COVID had postexertional malaise (PEM), which happens when a patient’s symptoms get worse after they do even minor physical or mental activities. According to the CDC, postexertional malaise can hit as long as 12-48 hours after the activity, and it can take people up to 2 weeks to fully recover.
Unfortunately, the advice patients get from their doctors sometimes makes the problem worse.
How long COVID defies simple solutions
Long COVID is a “dynamic disability” that requires health professionals to go off script when a patient’s symptoms don’t respond in a predictable way to treatment, said David Putrino, PhD, a neuroscientist, physical therapist, and director of rehabilitation innovation for the Mount Sinai Health System in New York.
“We’re not so good at dealing with somebody who, for all intents and purposes, can appear healthy and nondisabled on one day and be completely debilitated the next day,” he said.
Dr. Putrino said more than half of his clinic’s long-COVID patients told his team they had at least one of these persistent problems:
- Fatigue (82%).
- Brain fog (67%).
- Headache (60%).
- Sleep problems (59%).
- Dizziness (54%).
And 86% said exercise worsened their symptoms.
The symptoms are similar to what doctors see with illnesses such as lupus, Lyme disease, and chronic fatigue syndrome – something many experts compare long COVID to. Researchers and medical professionals still don’t know exactly how COVID-19 causes those symptoms. But there are some theories.
Potential causes of long-COVID symptoms
Dr. Putrino said it is possible the virus enters a patient’s cells and hijacks the mitochondria – a part of the cell that provides energy. It can linger there for weeks or months – something known as viral persistence.
“All of a sudden, the body’s getting less energy for itself, even though it’s producing the same amount, or even a little more,” he said. And there is a consequence to this extra stress on the cells. “Creating energy isn’t free. You’re producing more waste products, which puts your body in a state of oxidative stress,” Dr. Putrino said. Oxidative stress damages cells as molecules interact with oxygen in harmful ways.
“The other big mechanism is autonomic dysfunction,” Dr. Putrino said. It’s marked by breathing problems, heart palpitations, and other glitches in areas most healthy people never have to think about. About 70% of long-COVID patients at Mount Sinai’s clinic have some degree of autonomic dysfunction, he said.
For a person with autonomic dysfunction, something as basic as changing posture can trigger a storm of cytokines, a chemical messenger that tells the immune system where and how to respond to challenges like an injury or infection.
“Suddenly, you have this on-off switch,” Dr. Putrino said. “You go straight to ‘fight or flight,’ ” with a surge of adrenaline and a spiking heart rate, “then plunge back to ‘rest or digest.’ You go from fired up to so sleepy, you can’t keep your eyes open.”
A patient with viral persistence and one with autonomic dysfunction may have the same negative reaction to exercise, even though the triggers are completely different.
So how can doctors help long-COVID patients?
The first step, Dr. Putrino said, is to understand the difference between long COVID and a long recovery from COVID-19 infection.
Many of the patients in the latter group still have symptoms 4 weeks after their first infection. “At 4 weeks, yeah, they’re still feeling symptoms, but that’s not long COVID,” he said. “That’s just taking a while to get over a viral infection.”
Fitness advice is simple for those people: Take it easy at first, and gradually increase the amount and intensity of aerobic exercise and strength training.
But that advice would be disastrous for someone who meets Dr. Putrino’s stricter definition of long COVID: “Three to 4 months out from initial infection, they’re experiencing severe fatigue, exertional symptoms, cognitive symptoms, heart palpitations, shortness of breath,” he said.
“Our clinic is extraordinarily cautious with exercise” for those patients, he said.
In Dr. Putrino’s experience, about 20%-30% of patients will make significant progress after 12 weeks. “They’re feeling more or less like they felt pre-COVID,” he said.
The unluckiest 10%-20% won’t make any progress at all. Any type of therapy, even if it’s as simple as moving their legs from a flat position, worsens their symptoms.
The majority – 50%-60% – will have some improvement in their symptoms. But then progress will stop, for reasons researchers are still trying to figure out.
“My sense is that gradually increasing your exercise is still good advice for the vast majority of people,” UCSF’s Dr. Durstenfeld said.
Ideally, that exercise will be supervised by someone trained in cardiac, pulmonary, and/or autonomic rehabilitation – a specialized type of therapy aimed at resyncing the autonomic nervous system that governs breathing and other unconscious functions, he said. But those therapies are rarely covered by insurance, which means most long-COVID patients are on their own.
Dr. Durstenfeld said it’s important that patients keep trying and not give up. “With slow and steady progress, a lot of people can get profoundly better,” he said.
Mr. Fram, who’s worked with careful supervision, says he’s getting closer to something like his pre-COVID-19 life.
But he’s not there yet. Long COVID, he said, “affects my life every single day.”
A version of this article first appeared on WebMD.com.
When Joel Fram woke up on the morning of March 12, 2020, he had a pretty good idea why he felt so lousy.
He lives in New York, where the first wave of the coronavirus was tearing through the city. “I instantly knew,” said the 55-year-old Broadway music director. It was COVID-19.
What started with a general sense of having been hit by a truck soon included a sore throat and such severe fatigue that he once fell asleep in the middle of sending a text to his sister. The final symptoms were chest tightness and trouble breathing.
And then he started to feel better. “By mid-April, my body was feeling essentially back to normal,” he said.
So he did what would have been smart after almost any other illness: He began working out. That didn’t last long. “It felt like someone pulled the carpet out from under me,” he remembered. “I couldn’t walk three blocks without getting breathless and fatigued.”
That was the first indication Mr. Fram had long COVID.
According to the National Center for Health Statistics, at least 7.5% of American adults – close to 20 million people – have symptoms of long COVID.
COVID-19 patients who had the most severe illness will struggle the most with exercise later, according to a review published in June from researchers at the University of California, San Francisco. But even people with mild symptoms can struggle to regain their previous levels of fitness.
“We have participants in our study who had relatively mild acute symptoms and went on to have really profound decreases in their ability to exercise,” said Matthew S. Durstenfeld, MD, a cardiologist at UCSF and principal author of the review.
Most people with long COVID will have lower-than-expected scores on tests of aerobic fitness, as shown by Yale researchers in a study published in August 2021.
“Some amount of that is due to deconditioning,” Dr. Durstenfeld said. “You’re not feeling well, so you’re not exercising to the same degree you might have been before you got infected.”
In a study published in April, people with long COVID told researchers at Britain’s University of Leeds they spent 93% less time in physical activity than they did before their infection.
But multiple studies have found deconditioning is not entirely – or even mostly – to blame.
A 2021 study found that 89% of participants with long COVID had postexertional malaise (PEM), which happens when a patient’s symptoms get worse after they do even minor physical or mental activities. According to the CDC, postexertional malaise can hit as long as 12-48 hours after the activity, and it can take people up to 2 weeks to fully recover.
Unfortunately, the advice patients get from their doctors sometimes makes the problem worse.
How long COVID defies simple solutions
Long COVID is a “dynamic disability” that requires health professionals to go off script when a patient’s symptoms don’t respond in a predictable way to treatment, said David Putrino, PhD, a neuroscientist, physical therapist, and director of rehabilitation innovation for the Mount Sinai Health System in New York.
“We’re not so good at dealing with somebody who, for all intents and purposes, can appear healthy and nondisabled on one day and be completely debilitated the next day,” he said.
Dr. Putrino said more than half of his clinic’s long-COVID patients told his team they had at least one of these persistent problems:
- Fatigue (82%).
- Brain fog (67%).
- Headache (60%).
- Sleep problems (59%).
- Dizziness (54%).
And 86% said exercise worsened their symptoms.
The symptoms are similar to what doctors see with illnesses such as lupus, Lyme disease, and chronic fatigue syndrome – something many experts compare long COVID to. Researchers and medical professionals still don’t know exactly how COVID-19 causes those symptoms. But there are some theories.
Potential causes of long-COVID symptoms
Dr. Putrino said it is possible the virus enters a patient’s cells and hijacks the mitochondria – a part of the cell that provides energy. It can linger there for weeks or months – something known as viral persistence.
“All of a sudden, the body’s getting less energy for itself, even though it’s producing the same amount, or even a little more,” he said. And there is a consequence to this extra stress on the cells. “Creating energy isn’t free. You’re producing more waste products, which puts your body in a state of oxidative stress,” Dr. Putrino said. Oxidative stress damages cells as molecules interact with oxygen in harmful ways.
“The other big mechanism is autonomic dysfunction,” Dr. Putrino said. It’s marked by breathing problems, heart palpitations, and other glitches in areas most healthy people never have to think about. About 70% of long-COVID patients at Mount Sinai’s clinic have some degree of autonomic dysfunction, he said.
For a person with autonomic dysfunction, something as basic as changing posture can trigger a storm of cytokines, a chemical messenger that tells the immune system where and how to respond to challenges like an injury or infection.
“Suddenly, you have this on-off switch,” Dr. Putrino said. “You go straight to ‘fight or flight,’ ” with a surge of adrenaline and a spiking heart rate, “then plunge back to ‘rest or digest.’ You go from fired up to so sleepy, you can’t keep your eyes open.”
A patient with viral persistence and one with autonomic dysfunction may have the same negative reaction to exercise, even though the triggers are completely different.
So how can doctors help long-COVID patients?
The first step, Dr. Putrino said, is to understand the difference between long COVID and a long recovery from COVID-19 infection.
Many of the patients in the latter group still have symptoms 4 weeks after their first infection. “At 4 weeks, yeah, they’re still feeling symptoms, but that’s not long COVID,” he said. “That’s just taking a while to get over a viral infection.”
Fitness advice is simple for those people: Take it easy at first, and gradually increase the amount and intensity of aerobic exercise and strength training.
But that advice would be disastrous for someone who meets Dr. Putrino’s stricter definition of long COVID: “Three to 4 months out from initial infection, they’re experiencing severe fatigue, exertional symptoms, cognitive symptoms, heart palpitations, shortness of breath,” he said.
“Our clinic is extraordinarily cautious with exercise” for those patients, he said.
In Dr. Putrino’s experience, about 20%-30% of patients will make significant progress after 12 weeks. “They’re feeling more or less like they felt pre-COVID,” he said.
The unluckiest 10%-20% won’t make any progress at all. Any type of therapy, even if it’s as simple as moving their legs from a flat position, worsens their symptoms.
The majority – 50%-60% – will have some improvement in their symptoms. But then progress will stop, for reasons researchers are still trying to figure out.
“My sense is that gradually increasing your exercise is still good advice for the vast majority of people,” UCSF’s Dr. Durstenfeld said.
Ideally, that exercise will be supervised by someone trained in cardiac, pulmonary, and/or autonomic rehabilitation – a specialized type of therapy aimed at resyncing the autonomic nervous system that governs breathing and other unconscious functions, he said. But those therapies are rarely covered by insurance, which means most long-COVID patients are on their own.
Dr. Durstenfeld said it’s important that patients keep trying and not give up. “With slow and steady progress, a lot of people can get profoundly better,” he said.
Mr. Fram, who’s worked with careful supervision, says he’s getting closer to something like his pre-COVID-19 life.
But he’s not there yet. Long COVID, he said, “affects my life every single day.”
A version of this article first appeared on WebMD.com.