EXERCISE AND FITNESS
3 steps to total body fitness
You're
the star in your aerobics class, so you know you're being good to your
heart. But is that enough for your whole body? Not if you're female!
Experts say women need three types of exercise for total body fitness.
An aerobic workout is indeed good for your
heart; that means at least 20 minutes at your ideal target heart rate
three to five times a week.
But aerobic exercise is not enough. You
need to do weight-bearing exercise as well. This type involves impact
on your joints; walking is a good example. This kind of exercise will
build up your bones, helping to prevent osteoporosis, the so-called
brittle bone disease of aging women.
You also need strength resistance training,
which might include increasing your upper-body strength with light weights.
Total body fitness is important if you
want to ensure that you will not be confined to a nursing home when
you’re older. In fact, experts say physical condition is the biggest
indicator of independence in later life!
Women's sports come of age
When
I was growing up, sports meant one thing — gym class. Times have changed.
This summer, an unprecedented number of women are participating in the
Summer Olympic Games in Atlanta. Strong women. Proud women. It's a grand
time to be female.
Inspired, many of us are taking to the
jogging paths and bike trails. This is important, not only for us as
women, but for our health as well.
Playing sports offers impressive health
benefits. Consider breast cancer, for example. The medical profession
knows very little about how to prevent breast cancer. But, according
to a study published in 1994 in the National Journal of the Cancer Institute,
young women who exercise four hours a week reduce their breast cancer
risk by almost 60 percent.
This was not the first time exercise was
found to possible reduce cancer risk. In the 1980s, Harvard School of
Public Health geneticist Rose Frisch surveyed 5,398 female college graduates
to see which characteristics corresponded with future good health. Women
who played team sports reduced their lifetime risk of breast cancer
by 35 percent and cervical, uterine and other reproductive cancers by
61 percent.
Researchers speculate that exercise may
favorably alter the production of the ovarian hormones estrogen and
progesterone during the menstrual cycles. Other research shows vigorous
exercise can delay the onset of menstruation, decreasing a woman's lifetime
exposure to estrogen, which may lower breast cancer risk.
Regular exercise is credited with decreased
risk of coronary heart disease, stroke, osteoporosis and colon cancer.
Women who exercise regularly suffer less from depression and stress
and report an increased sense of well-being. Some studies indicate exercise
might also help us weather the symptoms of menopause.
This transformation of sports from a virtually
all-male enclave into an equal opportunities arena got a tremendous
boost in 1972, when the federal government passed a civil rights law
forbidding discrimination against girl's school sports. Since then,
participation of girls and women at all levels in sports has mushroomed.
Before, only one out of 27 high school girls played competitive sports;
now one-third do.
But this battle is not over. Girls in poor
cities cannot afford the time or equipment necessary to play. Without
professional teams, college girls must give up their athletic careers
when they are at their peak.
There also is a backlash brewing against
this law; Brown University, for one, is challenging a ruling that it
violated the law by not providing female students the same athletic
opportunities given to men.
We must not roll back the clock. Women
aren't playing sports just for fun. It's not only important for the
Olympics; it's important for our health and the health of our daughters
as well.
Exercise: How Much is Enough?
"No
pain, no gain" was the rule a few years back. Experts at the federal
Center for Disease Control decreed that getting in shape required —
at the barest minimum — at least 20 minutes of vigorous activity several
times a week.
But then, these very same experts seemed
to change their tune. In conjunction with the American College of Sports
Medicine, the CDC issued a statement relaxing its point of view. Instead,
the organization urged Americans to perform 30 minutes of moderate activity
each day.
Furthermore, this exercise didn't have
to be done all at once, or even be particularly strenuous. Suddenly,
activities like gardening, raking leaves and even dancing, counted.
But is this too good to be true? It seemed
so when a study published in the New England Journal of Medicine found
that women runners whose exercise levels far exceeded the revised CDC
guidelines reaped more health benefits than those who didn't.
Confused? Don't be. In issuing its more
relaxed guidelines, the CDC was being realistic, recognizing that millions
of American's don't exercise at all. The more relaxed guidelines are
designed to encourage the millions of us who don't exercise at all to
get off our duffs; it was not intended to encourage the active among
us to slack off.
So, if you're basically a couch potato,
take heed from the CDC's message. Go for a walk, do some gardening,
go dancing. By gradually increasing your exercise level you may eventually
find yourself exceeding it and becoming more active than you ever imagined.
Can you be fat — and fit?
If you're
fat, you can't be fit. True or false?
You've probably answered "true." After
all, it's been dunned into us that if you've overweight, you must not
care about your health.
This apparent truism was underscored last
year, when the results of a Harvard study showed that women who gained
as little as an extra twenty pounds increased their risk of dying. If
you want to avoid heart disease, diabetes, stroke, high blood pressure
and even some cancers, then lose weight, the experts all chorus.
But this is easier said than done. Millions
of us spend billions of dollars each year on diets, to no avail. And
even if we strive to reject society's cult of thinness, we're left with
the lingering fear that we're still eating our way to our graves.
Steven Blair thinks this is wrong. An epidemiologist
at the Cooper Institute for Aerobics Research in Dallas, Blair points
out that studies which equate overweight with early death have one thing
in common — they've neglected to factor in physical fitness. It may
not be the extra pounds which are unhealthy, but the lack of fitness,
he contends.
In studies he's done at the Institute,
he's found that those who are fat do risk earlier death, but only if
they're not physically fit. As for those who are slender, they risk
an earlier death too, if they don’t exercise, Blair's study showed.
The bottom line? Being heavy doesn't mean
you can't be fit. You can reap benefits from exercise, no matter what
the scale reads.
Gifts for a healthy Valentine's Day
On
Valentine's Day, why not give someone you love the gift of good health.
Here are suggestions for gifts that can make a real difference in their
lives:
- A Walkman and audio cassette of music
for walking, jogging or running. From country tunes to Broadway, there
are tapes to suit everyone's taste.
- Dance lessons - for couples, such as
ballroom or square dancing, or go solo with jazz, tap or ballet.
- Exercise clothing - a leotard or sweat
suit.
- A gift certificate for a pair of new
athletic shoes.
- A subscription to a health or sports
magazine.
- A gift certificate for a stress-easing
massage.
- A set of weights and an instructional
video.
- A basket filled with health and beauty
aids that you assembled yourself.
- A donation in your loved one's name
to a favorite health-oriented charity.
- A journal with pages designed to record
healthy habits.
- A certificate promising to join in a
specified number of walks.
You're limited only by your imagination.
But don't forget the best gift of all is to give of yourself. Joining
your spouse, parent or child in healthy activities is a way to parlay
your gifts into benefits that you'll enjoy, too.
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