The Day

More Americans exercise while they work

- By SAM HANANEL

Glued to your desk at work? Cross that off the list of excuses for not having the time to exercise.

A growing number of Americans are standing, walking and even cycling their way through the workday at treadmill desks, standup desks or other moving workstatio­ns. Others are forgoing chairs in favor of giant exercise balls to stay fit.

Walking on a treadmill while making phone calls and sorting through emails means “being productive on two fronts,” said Andrew Lockerbie, senior vice president of benefits at Brown & Brown, a global insurance consulting firm.

Lockerbie can burn 350 calories a day walking 3 to 4 miles on one of two treadmill desks that his company’s Indianapol­is office purchased earlier this year.

“I’m in meetings and at my desk and on the phone all day,” he said. “It’s great to be able to have an option at my work to get some physical activity while I’m actually doing office stuff. You feel better, you get your blood moving, you think clearly.”

Treadmill desks designed for the workplace are normally set to move at 1 to 2 mph, enough to get the heart rate up but not too fast to distract from reading or talking on the phone comfortabl­y.

It’s been a decade since scientific studies began to show that too much sitting can lead to obesity and increase the risk of developing diabetes, high blood pressure and heart disease. Even going to the gym three times a week doesn’t offset the harm of being sedentary for hours at a time, said Dr. James Levine, an endocrinol­ogist at the Mayo Clinic.

“There’s a glob of informatio­n that sitting is killing us,” Levine said. “You’re basically sitting yourself into a coffin.”

More companies are intrigued by the idea of helping employees stay healthy, lose weight and reduce stress— especially if it means lower insurance costs and higher productivi­ty, said Levine, an enthusiast­ic supporter of the moving workstatio­ns.

“Even walking at 1 mile an hour has very substantia­l benefits,” Levine said, such as doubling metabolic rate and improving blood sugar levels.

Sales at Indianapol­is-based TreadDesk are expected to increase 25 percent this year as large corporatio­ns, including Microsoft, Coca Cola, United Healthcare and Procter & Gamble have started buying the workstatio­ns in bulk, said Jerry Carr, the company’s president.

At LifeSpan Fitness, based in Salt Lake City, sales of treadmill desks more than tripled over 2012, said Peter Schenk, company president.

“We don’t see the growth slowing down for several years as right now we are just moving from early adopters, which are educated and highly health conscious, to more mainstream users,” Schenk said.

Treadmill desks can range from about $ 800 to $5,000 or more, depending on the manufactur­er and model. Desks cycles start as low as $149 for models that can fit under an existing desk but can run $1,400 or more for those with a desk built in. Standup desks can run as low as $250 for platforms that can rest on an existing desk.

Some workers have opted for lower-profile— and lower-cost— ways to stay fit at work, such as sitting on giant exercise balls instead of chairs. Using the inflatable balls can help improve posture and strengthen abs, legs and backmuscle­s.

“I’ve got nurses in my operating room who will use one of those balls instead of a chair,” said Michael

Maloney, a professor of orthopedic­s and sports medicine specialist at the University of Rochester Medical Center.

Maloney said anyone trying an exercise ball, treadmill desk or moving workstatio­n should do so carefully. Those who have not been exercising regularly should start using the equipment in small time increments to avoid injury.

“They have to just do it with some common sense and not overdo it,” Maloney said. “Just pay attention to how their body is responding to the new activities.”

Levine said he was at first skeptical that a standup desk would offer improvemen­ts in health comparable to treadmill desks or other moving workstatio­ns.

“It appears I was completely wrong,” he said. “Once you’re off your bottom, it’s inevitable that you start meandering around. Within two minutes of standing, one activates a series of metabolic processes that are beneficial. Once you sit, all of those things get switched off.”

Denise Bober, director of human resources at The Breakers, the resort hotel in Palm Beach, Fla., said having a treadmill desk in her office has made a big difference in how she feels after work.

“The more movement and interactio­n I have, the more energy I have at the end of the day,” she said.

Bober spends one to three hours walking when she’s in the office, usually at 2 mph.

“If I go faster, then I make too many typing errors, but if I’m just reading a report I can go faster,” she said.

 ?? MICHAEL CONROY/AP PHOTO ?? Josh Baldonado, an administra­tive assistant at Brown & Brown Insurance in Indiana, works at a treadmill desk on Aug. 28.
MICHAEL CONROY/AP PHOTO Josh Baldonado, an administra­tive assistant at Brown & Brown Insurance in Indiana, works at a treadmill desk on Aug. 28.

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