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Walking 'not enough to get fit'
Walking may not be enough on its own to produce significant health benefits, research suggests.
A team from Canada's
University of Alberta compared a 10,000-step exercise programme with a
more traditional fitness regime of moderate intensity.
Researchers found improvements in fitness levels were significantly higher in the second group.
They told an American College of Sports Medicine meeting that gentle exercise was not enough to get fit.
Lead researcher Dr Vicki
Harber said: "Generally, low-intensity activity such as walking alone
is not likely to give anybody marked health benefits compared to
programmes that occasionally elevate the intensity."
Dr Harber and her
colleagues were concerned there was too much focus on simply getting
people to take exercise, rather than on its intensity.
They compared people on a
10,000-step exercise regime, which they completed at their own pace,
with a group whose routine was tougher, but which left them enough
breath to be able to speak one or two sentences with ease at the end.
Both routines, which lasted
for six months, burned off the same amount of energy. In total 128
sedentary people took part in the project.
Fitness measures
The researchers assessed impact on fitness by measuring blood pressure, and peak oxygen uptake, a measure of lung capacity.
They found that the step
programme increased peak oxygen uptake by an average of 4% over the six
months - but the figure for the moderate intensity exercise group was
10%.
Other markers of overall
health, such as fasting plasma glucose levels and blood fat levels were
unaffected by either exercise programme.
Dr Harber said: "Our
concern is that people might think what matters most is the total
number of daily steps accumulated, and not pay much attention to the
pace or effort invested in taking those steps."
She said the 10,000-step programme did help to get people motivated - and was an excellent way to start taking exercise.
"But to increase the effectiveness, one must add some intensity or "huff and puff" to their exercise.
"Across your day, while you are achieving those 10,000 steps, take 200 to 400 of them at a brisker pace.
'Educated guess'
"You've got to do more than
light exercise and move towards the inclusion of regular moderate
activity, and don't be shy to interject an occasional period of time at
the vigorous level."
Professor Stuart Biddle, an
expert in exercise science at the University of Loughborough, said it
was possible that the current guidelines on how much exercise to take
were set too low.
"They are based on a little bit of an educated guess," he said.
"However, you have got to
strike a compromise between physiology and psychology. The harder you
make it, the fewer people will actually do it.
"It may be that very small changes to the fitness of a large section of the population would have quite a big impact."
Professor Biddle said
there was no doubt that vigorous exercise was the way to get fit, but
volume rather than intensity might be more useful in tackling issues
such as obesity.
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