Otago Daily Times

Exercise and link to environmen­t explored

- JOHN GIBB

PHYSICAL exercise is ‘‘powerful medicine’’ which enables people to live longer, but such physical activity is ‘‘much more than just medicine’’, Prof Jim Cotter, of the University of Otago, said yesterday.

Physical activity improved thinking, creativity, and quality of life and also countered key health risks, including cardiovasc­ular and neurologic­al diseases, he said.

Exercise was versatile and ‘‘highly accessible’’ but should not be simply ‘‘put in a box’’ and viewed only as medicine.

But Prof Cotter, of the Otago School of Physical Education, Sport and Exercise Sciences, yesterday gave an inaugural professori­al lecture on ‘‘Exploring exercise, the environmen­t, and their extremes’’, and also commented in an interview.

Exercise and fitness were ‘‘immensely complex’’ and were also often misunderst­ood or insufficie­ntly understood.

The experience of walking or undertakin­g other exercise at the beach or in other beautiful countrysid­e near Dunedin also offered wider, holistic benefits, including spiritual insights, he said.

‘‘Natural environmen­ts provide rich opportunit­ies for human developmen­t.’’

People benefited from being physically active in the natural environmen­t, and given rapidly rising levels of inactivity among New Zealand adults, access to the countrysid­e was becoming ‘‘a fitness issue’’.

Declining physical fitness potentiall­y meant less access to natural environmen­ts, and could also mean declining awareness of them, and reduced advocacy to protect them.

Prof Cotter researches how stressors within exercise and the environmen­t affect people’s physiologi­cal systems and func tional abilities.

Exercise was a ‘‘uniquely complex stress’’ and generated heat.

Human heat defences were ‘‘uniquely powerful, elaborate and complex’’.

Exercise and fitness were ‘‘important, but not at the expense of the environmen­t’’, he said.

 ??  ?? Speaking out . . . Prof Jim Cotter, of the University of Otago, discusses the wider benefits of physical activity and fitness yesterday.PHOTO: PETER MCINTOSH
Speaking out . . . Prof Jim Cotter, of the University of Otago, discusses the wider benefits of physical activity and fitness yesterday.PHOTO: PETER MCINTOSH

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from New Zealand