The Star Malaysia

Sitting to your death

A study finds that sitting for long periods of time may shorten your life.

- By MELISSA HEALY

YOU can spend a lot of accumulate­d time on your bottom in the course of a day. Or you can sit for lengthy spells without a break.

Both, it turns out, are very bad for you. Whether you’re a heavy sitter or a binge-sitter, racking up prolonged sedentary time increases your risk of early death, according to a study published in the Sept 12th edition of the Annals Of Internal Medicine. That conclusion held up even after researcher­s took account of mitigating fac- tors, such as time spent exercising.

Even for people who hit the gym after a long day in a desk chair, sitting can be deadly.

The findings led the study’s authors to suggest that people who sit a lot should get up and move around every 30 minutes to counter the health risks that come with prolonged sedentary behaviour.

The study team, led by Columbia University exercise researcher Dr Keith Diaz in the United States, tracked the movements of close to 8,000 Americans older than 45 by asking them to wear an accelerome­ter on their hip.

Over a period of 10 days, sitting or lounging behaviour took up the equivalent of 12.3 hours over a 16-hour waking day – about 77% on average.

That’s a whole lot of sitting.

But subjects differed in the extent to which they hunkered down for long stretches without getting up and moving around.

When researcher­s measured the “bout length” of subjects’ sitting spells, they found that 52% lasted less than a half-hour, 22% lasted between a half-hour and just under an hour, 14% lasted 60 to 89 minutes and 14% went on for more than 90 minutes.

The sit of less harm

After tracking the subjects for four years, the researcher­s found that those who racked up the most time sitting were most likely to have died during the study period, and those who spent the least time sitting were least likely to have died. That was no surprise.

But when they looked at the death rates as a function of how often subjects went long hours without getting up, they saw a similar pattern: Those whose sitting bouts tended to be lengthier were more likely to have died than were those whose sitting spells tended to be shorter.

Make no mistake, the authors of the new research cautioned: “Accumulati­on of large volumes of sedentary time is a hazardous health behaviour, regardless of how it is accumulate­d.”

But logging sedentary time in shorter bouts of sitting “is the least harmful pattern of accumulati­on”.

Study participan­ts who racked up the most time in a chair tended to be older, were more likely to smoke, and were disproport­ionately African-American.

They tended to be teetotalle­rs, to have a higher body mass index (BMI), and were less likely to get much intentiona­l exercise.

They were also more likely to have diabetes, high blood pressure, worrisome cholestero­l readings, and a history of stroke, atrial fibrillati­on or coronary heart disease.

Such findings, of course, beg the question of which comes first – the immobility or the illness that leads to death.

“Observatio­nal studies, no matter how well designed, cannot imply causality,” University of Toronto, Canada, cardiologi­st Dr David A. Alter warned in an editorial.

But the findings of this prospectiv­e population-based study do fit with those of experiment­al studies.

In trials involving humans sequestere­d in research labs, scientists have shown that racking up prolonged, uninterrup­ted bouts of sitting and lounging cause more worrisome short-term changes in metabolic and cardiovasc­ular function than sedentary behaviour that’s interrupte­d by periods of physical activity.

It only makes sense that those short-term changes translate over time to more profound changes in the risk for diseases linked to sedentary behaviour, said Dr James A. Levine, an obesity expert at the Mayo Clinic in the US, who studies the health effects of sitting.

“If you’re sitting too much, you need to do something about it – like right now,” he said.

“Unless you get moving now, you’re in trouble later.”

The finding that a workout will not undo the harms caused by prolonged sitting is unsurprisi­ng, Dr Levine added.

“Even if you’re a gym-goer and think you’re safe on account of your excellent effort, you are not,” he said.

“No one gets away from this stuff.... Excess sitting, this study seems to suggest, is a death sentence.”

In his editorial, Dr Alter worried that people intent on reversing patterns of sedentary behaviour will have a lot on their plates.

To live longer, healthier lives “may require us to count the total number of hours we are sedentary per day, the total number of minutes we sit at a time, the total number of standing breaks we take per hour, the total number of steps we take per day, and the total metabolic equivalent of task-minute volume of exercise we achieve per week,” he wrote.

“Yikes! That sure is a lot of counting over the course of a lifetime – all to reverse the evolutiona­ry patterns of a society gone lazy,” he added.

“Might it not just be easier to return to our origins as hunters and gatherers?” – Los Angeles Times/Tribune News Service

 ??  ?? Does this office scene seem familiar? Instead of sitting all the time, your goal should be to get up and move every 30 minutes to help you live a longer life. — TNS
Does this office scene seem familiar? Instead of sitting all the time, your goal should be to get up and move every 30 minutes to help you live a longer life. — TNS

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia