Boost your health by walking, fidgeting
Spending too much time on your tush can lead to numerous health woes. But here’s an easy fix: After an hour of sitting, walk around for two minutes. It could reduce your risk of early death by a third, according to a report in the Clinical Journal of the American Society of Nephrology.
Here are three more benefits of walking:
1. Stable blood sugar
A short jaunt around the block after you eat could help keep your blood sugar steady, especially if you have type 2 diabetes, according to research published in the journal Diabetologia.
When adults with the condition walked for 10 minutes following every meal, they lowered their blood sugar 12% more, on average, than when they took a single 30-minute stroll each day.
“Walking uses large muscles in your legs and torso — which require a lot of energy,” explained Andrew Reynolds, Ph.D., lead study author and a postdoctoral fellow at the University of Otago in New Zealand.
“To get that energy, those muscles remove sugar from circulation, and your blood sugar goes down.” He added that after-meal walks may also help prevent diabetes in the first place.
2. Better heart health
You don’t need crazy-hard cardio to strengthen your heart. A review of data from more than 130,000 women, published in the Journal of the American College of Cardiology, found that those who walked for at least 30 minutes a day significantly lowered their risk of heart failure.
Other research has found that exercisers — and most of them were walkers — reduced their systolic blood pressure (the top number) by an average of nearly 9 mmHg, an improvement similar to that from medication, according to a meta-analysis in the British Journal of Sports Medicine.
Getting at least 150 minutes of moderate-intensity exercise, like brisk walking, each week is the benchmark for heart benefits, according to the American Heart Association.
3. Improved fertility, decreased
inflammation
Researchers from UMass Amherst found that overweight and obese women who regularly walked for at least 10 minutes at a time were nearly twice as likely to conceive as those who didn’t go for a stroll.
The researchers said that being at an unhealthy weight — which applies to nearly three-quarters of us — is linked to higher levels of chronic inflammation, which can affect fertility. Walking reduces that inflammation and also may lower stress levels.
Even fidgeting helps
Researchers at the University of Missouri discovered that fidgeting can reduce the arterial damage that happens from spending too much time on your derrière.
In the study, healthy men and women were asked to intermittently tap one foot while keeping the other one still. After three hours, researchers compared the blood flow in each leg and found that the fidgeting one showed improved vascular function, while the stationary leg was worse off.
Considering that the average person sits 15 hours a day, a little fidgeting could have very real benefits.
EatingWell is a magazine and website devoted to healthy eating as a way of life. Online at eatingwell.com.
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