Physical
inactivity poses greatest Health Risk to Americans
Newswise — As many as
50 million Americans are living sedentary lives, putting them at increased
risk of health problems and even early death, a leading expert in exercise
science told the American Psychological Association today.
Speaking at APA’s
117th Annual Convention, Steven Blair, PED, called Americans’ physical
inactivity “the biggest public health problem of the 21st century.”
Blair is a professor
of exercise science and epidemiology at the University of South Carolina’s
Arnold School of Public Health. He is one of the world’s premier experts on
exercise and its health benefits and was the senior scientific editor of the
1996 U.S. Surgeon General’s Report on Physical Activity and Health.
Research has shown
approximately 25 percent to 35 percent of American adults are inactive,
Blair said, meaning that they have sedentary jobs, no regular physical
activity program and are generally inactive around the house or yard. “This
amounts to 40 million to 50 million people exposed to the hazard of
inactivity,” Blair said in an interview. “Given that these individuals are
doubling their risk of developing numerous health conditions compared with
those who are even moderately active and fit, we’re looking at a major
public health problem.”
Blair’s extensive
research comes primarily from the Aerobics Center Longitudinal Study, in
which he found that fitness level was a significant predictor of mortality.
The ongoing study began in 1970 and includes more than 80,000 patients. The
researchers periodically measured the participants’ body composition and
body mass index, and each patient underwent a stress test. Researchers also
looked at numerous other factors including the participants’ medical
histories.
One follow-up study
of 40,842 longitudinal study participants showed poor fitness level
accounted for about 16 percent of all deaths in both men and women. The
percentage was calculated by estimating the number of deaths that would have
been avoided if people had spent 30 minutes a day walking. This percentage
was significantly higher than when other risk factors were considered,
including obesity, smoking, high cholesterol and diabetes. The Aerobics
Center Longitudinal Study also found that moderately fit men lived six years
longer than unfit men.
More examination of
14,811 female patients in the ACLS showed that women who were very fit were
55 percent less likely to die from breast cancer than women who were not in
good shape. This was after the researchers had controlled for BMI, smoking,
family history of breast cancer and other possible risk factors.
Blair also
highlighted the benefits of exercise on the mind, referring to recent
emerging evidence that activity delays the mind’s decline and is good for
brain health overall. Blair said he thinks psychologists can be integral in
helping patients understand the health hazards of being inactive and
encouraging people to look for more ways to get moving. “Over the past few
decades, we have largely engineered the need for physical activity out of
the daily lives of most people in industrialized societies,” said Blair.
The message should be
simple, he said: Doing something is better than doing nothing, and doing
more is better than doing less, at least up to a point. “We need numerous
changes to promote more physical activity for all, including public
policies, changes in the health care system, promoting activity in
educational settings and worksites, and social and physical environmental
changes. We need more communities where people feel comfortable walking. I
believe psychologists can help develop better lifestyle change interventions
to help people be more active via the Internet and other technological
methods.”
The American
Psychological Association, in Washington, D.C., is the largest scientific
and professional organization representing psychology in the United States
and is the world’s largest association of psychologists. APA’s membership
includes more than 150,000 researchers, educators, clinicians, consultants
and students. Through its divisions in 54 subfields of psychology and
affiliations with 60 state, territorial and Canadian provincial
associations, APA works to advance psychology as a science, as a profession
and as a means of promoting health, education and human welfare.