Short, Low-Intensity Exercise Has Benefits
advertisement
Resource Center
Club Industry Trade Shows
Club Industry trade shows are the most comprehensive events in the fitness industry. Learn more about these exciting conferences and expositions.
Industry Events & Trade Shows
The industry-wide calendar features listings for educational events, trade shows and more.
Buyers Guide
Find industry businesses by product or service categories, view company profiles and more.
Classifieds
View classified ads for health club equipment and services, plus business opportunities and job postings.
Current Issue
Read stories from the latest print issue of Club Industry magazine.
Club info and News
Read news about some of the biggest names in the industry.
- 24 Hour Fitness
- Anytime Fitness
- Bally Total Fitness
- Crunch Fitness
- Club One
- Curves
- Equinox
- Gold's Gym
- Health Fitness Corp.
- LA Fitness
- Life Time Fitness
- Lifestyle Family Fitness
- Planet Fitness
- Plus One Management
- Snap Fitness
- Spectrum Athletic Clubs
- Sport & Health
- Town Sports International
- Sports Club Co.
- Urban Active
- Wellbridge
- Western Athletic Clubs
- World Gym
Latest From Twitter
BATON ROUGE, LA -- Daily, mild exercise such as walking or bike riding improves the fitness of post-menopausal women who are currently sedentary, overweight or obese, according to new research reported in the Journal of the American Medical Association.
Dr. Timothy Church of the Pennington Biomedical Research Center led a team of researchers who examined the effect of various amounts of walking on more than 460 women. The results showed that as little as 15 minutes a day, five days a week, of walking on a treadmill or riding a stationary bike improved fitness.
"The level of walking we studied was so light most people would not consider it exercise," Church says, "The message for women here is just get up and walk. You don't need a gym, you don't need fancy clothes or a stopwatch. All you need is a pair of comfortable shoes that you can walk in."
The women were randomly placed into one of four groups: a control group that did not exercise and groups that exercised 72 minutes, 135 minutes or 191 minutes of exercise per week. Church's team found that the more exercise performed, the greater the increase in fitness, which was expected. However, the lowest exercise groups also saw improvements in fitness, which the team did not expect.
"The surprising news," Church says, "is that the lowest exercise group showed significant improvement. We continue to recommend 30 minutes a day of walking at least five days a week, but the data suggests just doing something—even 15 minutes a day—is better than nothing."
Want to use this article? Click here for options!
© 2009 Penton Media Inc.









Acceptable Use Policy blog comments powered by Disqus