Cape Argus

Mortality benefits for all weekend warriors

The greatest rewards come to those who exercise three or four times a week, writes Amby Burfoot

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HEALTH and fitness experts have long described “weekend warriors” in a mildly negative way. They used the term for individual­s who exercised irregularl­y, perhaps in weekend pick-up games. They warned of muscle strains, or much worse – something akin to the heart attacks suffered by those who occasional­ly shovel snow. Weekend warrior meant, more or less, “knucklehea­d”.

But no more. A large new study in Jama Internal Medicine has revealed large mortality benefits for all manner of weekend warriors.

Those who worked out once or twice a week had a 30 percent lower mortality rate (during the study period, from 1994 to 2012) than those who didn’t exercise at all.

Despite their infrequent workouts, these individual­s exceeded the 150 minutes a week of moderate to vigorous exercise advocated by US and world health organisati­ons. In that regard, their good results might have been expected.

The study was based on more than 63 000 British and Scottish adults with an average age of 58. A research team from the UK, Australia and Harvard University collaborat­ed on the analysis.

“We were surprised to find that cardiovasc­ular and cancer mortality were also lower among the weekend warriors,” says lead author Gary O’Donovan, from Loughborou­gh University in England. “Interestin­gly, we also found the benefits are much the same in men and women.”

Another subgroup of the 63 000, termed the “insufficie­nt exercisers”, fared just as well as the weekend warriors. The insufficie­nts accumulate­d only 60 minutes of exercise a week, less than half of the recommende­d amount. Yet they reaped a 31 percent lower mortality rate versus the non-exercisers.

The greatest rewards came to those who exercised three or more times a week. These individual­s tended to go longer and slower than less-frequent exercisers but logged impressive weekly totals of about 450 minutes. They had a 35 percent lower all-cause mortality rate.

“This study is important because it tells us that the total amount of exercise, rather than how often it is done, is the relevant factor,” co-author and Harvard epidemiolo­gist I-Min Lee says.

“It gives permission, if you will, to be a weekend warrior. However, we would prefer regular activity over the week to decrease the risk of injuries.”

The Jama article did not track the incidence of injury. But injuries couldn’t have been too great of an obstacle, or the weekend warriors wouldn’t have been able to continue their routine and reap the gains.

A large majority of the subjects, 63 percent, reported no exercise, while 22 percent were labelled insufficie­nt exercisers. The weekend warriors amounted to just 3.7 percent of the total subject population, but that equated to 2 341 people, thanks to the study’s large size. Eleven percent of subjects were regular exercisers, getting in three or more workouts a week.

In the US the latest report by the Centres for Disease Control and Prevention indicates that 51% of adults don’t meet the guidelines for aerobic activity and that 79 percent don’t meet the guidelines for aerobics plus strength work.

Many midlife people with active family lives and burgeoning careers find it difficult to make time for regular workouts. As a result, fitness advocates often encourage a small-steps approach to exercise.

Don’t be discourage­d if you don’t have the time to train for a half-marathon, they advise. Focus on what you can do, not what you can’t. Anything is better than nothing. The new research seems to confirm this. Before 2008, US activity guidelines urged three to five workouts a week – three if they were vigorous, five if more moderate. This changed in 2008 with a new set of guidelines that dropped the frequency recommenda­tion. Instead, the new guidelines emphasise total minutes per week – 75 if you do vigorous exercise, such as running, or 150 for more moderate exercise, such as walking.

This has led to a variety of popular new approaches such as HIT (high-intensity training) workouts, CrossFit and seven-minute apps. They have not been around long enough for anyone to track injury rates or lifetime payoffs.

“Our results show that weekend warrior and other activity patterns may provide health benefits even when they fall short of physical activity guidelines,” says study co-author Emmanuel Stamatakis, from the University of Sydney. – Washington Post

 ??  ?? HEALTH BENEFIT: Many midlife people with active family lives and burgeoning careers find it difficult to make time for regular workouts.
HEALTH BENEFIT: Many midlife people with active family lives and burgeoning careers find it difficult to make time for regular workouts.
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