Brits 'dying not to do exercise'

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celeritas
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Brits 'dying not to do exercise'

Post by celeritas »

Most UK adults are so unwilling to exercise that not even the threat of an early death is enough to get them off the sofa, a survey suggests.

Only 38% of people questioned by YouGov said they would do more exercise if their life depended on it.

And British Heart Foundation figures show only a third of people manage to do enough exercise to achieve the minimum recommended amount.

Experts warned inactivity is dangerous even in those who are a healthy weight.

Among the 2,100 people surveyed, brisk walking was found to be the favourite way of getting exercise - before dancing, swimming or going to the gym.

However, only 4% said they found exercise fun.

A greater inspiration was exercising to change body shape, particularly among women and young adults.

Almost a third of 18 to 24-year-olds reported they would do more exercise if they saw an unflattering photo of themselves or were told they looked fat.

Other less predictable forms of motivation to work out included fancying someone at the gym.

But only 13% of men and 7% of women said keeping a healthy heart was their main motivator.

Excuses for not exercising were found to be always close at hand - from not having enough time to the one in seven who blame bad weather for not doing enough physical activity.

The British Heart Foundation, which is launching a campaign to encourage people to up their heart rate for 30 minutes a day, says that someone dies every 15 minutes as a direct result of physical inactivity.

Dr Mike Knapton, director of prevention and care at the BHF, said it was a "deadly serious" problem.

"With our busy lifestyles and labour-saving devices we've stopped getting the exercise our bodies desperately need.

"For many people, exercise has become an ugly word, something to avoid at all costs - but you'd be amazed how easy it is to up the tempo of your heartbeat.

"Just 30 minutes a day will do you and your heart the world of good."

The government recommends a minimum of 30 minutes of moderate-intensity physical activity five times a week.

Dr David Haslam, clinical director of the National Obesity Forum, said it made for depressing reading but confirmed what had been shown in clinical trials, where even those who had a heart attack did not change their lifestyles.

"Children instinctively exercise when left to their own devices, but they don't because they're stopped from doing that by the school curriculum and parents scared of child abductors and murderers lurking on every corner.

"So, if it doesn't become a habit, you're not going to work hard to go against the tide and introduce it as an adult."

He added that exercise could be incorporated into everyday life.

"Physical activity and obesity are too different risk factors, so even if you're lean, if you're inactive you increase your risk of cancer and cardiovascular disease," he said.
Link: http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/health/6994632.stm

getting time to exercise is hard; i struggle everyday to get my studying done early enough to squeeze in 30 minutes of exercise (and, yes, i know, 2 hours of surfing ditl.org which should have been spent studying). comments?
shran
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Post by shran »

depending on where yoiu live, you can easily get your amount of excercise by cycling to your work, and you can do that just fine, at least if it is within 15 km of your house. When keeping in shape, I suppose 30 km won't be much of a problem. And Weather? that's a lame excuse. Our bodies were designed in the past 2 million years to withstand harshconditions. And for the rest, clothing was invented with a reason: to protect us from the harsher kinds of weather.
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Post by Mikey »

I hate to even get into a write-up of how amazinglu unhealthy and sedentary a typical middle-class American lifestyle is.

One example: my nephew - 12 yrs old, 5'9" tall, 192 lbs. (not a typo) was at my house for a barbecue. It was sunny, about 82 degrees F, a beautiful day. He and some other kids asked if they could hook up his Nintendo Wii, which he brought with hin from home (!), to play a baseball game.

I told him there was my entire front yard available, which is more than large enough for a 6-person pickup game of baseball. He looked at me like I was speaking ancinet Sanskrit to him.
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shran
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Post by shran »

Those things are all quite easy to solve. Bring all parents in the neighborhood together, come to the consensus that they should only let children play * minutes on computer/wii/anything if they spend an equal time on physical excercise, like, say, running laps around the neighborhood.
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Post by Sionnach Glic »

Thankfully, I'm not that bad. I'm not big on eating healthy, but I walk to and from work, and if I try not to use a car.
Most of the kids around here are pretty okay, a lot of them play sports and the school has literaly dozens of sports teams.
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