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Behavioral Health Advisor 2007.2: Exercise to Stay Healthy Health Library

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Exercise to Stay Healthy

Benefits of exercise

Exercise has many benefits. Our bodies thrive on regular physical activity. Exercise provides both physical and emotional rewards. Exercise can:

  • decrease your blood pressure
  • decrease your total blood cholesterol
  • decrease your blood sugar.

These physical effects decrease the risk of stroke, heart disease, and diabetes. Exercise can also help you lose weight or keep a healthy weight.

Among the emotional benefits of exercise are:

  • improved sense of well-being
  • increased physical and emotional stamina
  • improved sleep.

Exercise affects our brain chemistry. For example, exercise can help treat mild depression. It can also help you have more energy.

Finally, exercise increases the body's metabolic rate. Regular exercise raises the number of calories your body uses during activity and for several hours afterward.

Types of exercise

Aerobic exercise, which involves continuous activity, increases endurance and helps your body use oxygen more effectively. Your lungs work harder to bring in more oxygen and your heart pumps harder to send blood to the muscles. This process strengthens your lungs, heart, bones, and muscles. Aerobic activities that increase cardiovascular fitness include:

  • walking briskly
  • swimming
  • running
  • jogging
  • climbing stairs
  • using a stationary bicycle
  • bicycling
  • vigorous dancing
  • ice skating or roller skating
  • aerobics, regular or low impact
  • cross-country skiing
  • rowing.

Other types of exercise, such as weight lifting and stretching, can improve muscle strength and flexibility. Such exercise improves endurance, dexterity, and balance.

Exercises performed at low and moderate intensity will help you stay fit and healthy. You do not need to exercise strenuously to improve your health. For example, regular, moderate activity, such as three 10-minute walks a day, reduces your risk of death from heart disease by as much as 60%.

With your healthcare provider's approval, your goal should be 30 to 90 minutes of moderate exercise a day, most days of the week. Moderate aerobic exercise is generally defined as requiring the energy it takes to walk 2 miles in 30 minutes. You may need to exercise 60 minutes a day to prevent weight gain and 90 minutes a day to lose weight. Be sure to check with your healthcare provider before starting your exercise program.

Choosing an exercise program

Before beginning an exercise program, consider the following questions:

  • What physical activities do you enjoy?
  • Do you prefer group or individual activities?
  • What kind of program best fits your schedule?
  • Do you have any physical conditions that limit your choice of exercise program? For example, if you have arthritis, ask your healthcare provider about ways to exercise, including range-of-motion exercises.

The following table can help you plan your exercise program. It lists the average number of calories burned per hour in some common physical activities. Some of the activities can be either moderate or vigorous, depending on how fast you do them (for example, walking or bicycling).

 
Moderate Physical Activity   Calories/hr for a 154-lb Person*
-----------------------------------------------------------
Hiking                                          370 
Light gardening/yardwork                        330 
Dancing                                         330 
Golf (walking and carrying clubs)               330 
Bicycling (less than 10 miles per hour)         290 
Walking (3.5 miles per hour)                    280 
Weight lifting (general light workout)          220 
Stretching                                      180 

Vigorous Physical Activity   Calories/hr for a 154-lb Person*
------------------------------------------------------------ 
Running/jogging (5 miles per hour)              590 
Bicycling (more than 10 miles per hour)         590 
Swimming (slow freestyle laps)                  510 
Aerobics                                        480 
Walking (4.5 miles per hour)                    460 
Heavy yard work (chopping wood)                 440 
Weight lifting (vigorous effort)                440 
Basketball (vigorous)                           440 
------------------------------------------------------------
* Calories burned per hour will be higher if you weigh more 
than 154 pounds (70 kilograms) and lower if you weigh less. 
Source: Adapted from the Dietary Guidelines for Americans 
2005. 

Warm-Up and Cool-Down Exercises

You should include warm-up and cool-down exercises before and after aerobic exercise. Muscles and joints that have not been used are cool. Start out walking slowly and then gradually increase the pace over a 5-minute period. If you cannot walk, try easy cycling or other activities at slow, easy paces. This gives the body time to increase blood flow to the working muscles and joints and prepare them for harder work. Then stretch your muscles and bend your joints for 5 to 10 minutes. This warms your muscles and joints by increasing the flow of blood to them. It makes them more flexible and less prone to injury. Your choice of stretches depends on the type of exercise you plan to do. Hold each stretch for 30 seconds and do not bounce.

Right after exercise, allow your heart rate to return slowly to normal. For example, walking slowly for about 5 minutes will let you cool down and allow your heart and breathing to return to normal levels. Then stretch the muscles used during your exercise. After stretching, your muscles will be more flexible and less stiff. Devote a total of 5 to 10 minutes to cooling down. You can use warm-up exercises for cool-down exercises.

Developed by Phyllis G. Cooper, RN, MN, and McKesson Corporation
Published by McKesson Corporation.
Last modified: 2006-11-01
Last reviewed: 2006-05-31
This content is reviewed periodically and is subject to change as new health information becomes available. The information is intended to inform and educate and is not a replacement for medical evaluation, advice, diagnosis or treatment by a healthcare professional.
Copyright © 2007 McKesson Corporation and/or one of its subsidiaries. All Rights Reserved.
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