Proven Health Risks from Sedentary lifestyle.


If you think about it, you may find examples of synchronicity occurring in your life. This definitely happens to me. An event that might otherwise be considered a coincidence can strangely be a fortunate help or guide to your well-being or success.

This ABC (Australia) TV broadcast  (“Sitting is Deadly“), is one such example to me. Having passed the “four score and ten”, biblical ‘allotted’, life span age without any hint of health issues and without significant hereditary or obvious dietary factors being involved, I suffered a minor heart attack requiring a stent and was diagnosed as having other arterial blockages of varying degrees.

In the space of a few weeks, I went from experiencing physical stress-induced tightness in the chest to a continuous pain without physical exertion.  A complete blockage of a heart artery.

If it hadn’t been for the final rapid deterioration, I might be able to accept that blockages had very gradually developed over the many years.  However, if I introduce the factor of a fairly recent lifestyle change, the situation starts to make sense. Although I have been retired from a reasonable active full-time job for 7 years, I had been keeping reasonably active. Not to the degree that the medical people recommend (at least 30 minutes active excercise at least 5 days per week), but I had been generally mobile and played table tennis for 2 to 3 hours at least twice a week.

Recently however, I became hooked on internet activities. Besides a fair bit of email use from administration, I started contributing commentary to a social website (TIP), then set up a website for the Table Tennis Club, then my own personal site, this one of course.

Net result has been that I now spend many hours each day sitting at the computer. It is now easy to see the correlation with my health issues. This TV article provides strong evidence, and should be seriously thought about by everyone in similar lifestyle situations.

My thanks to the ABC and the God of Synchronicity, I will now have frequent active breaks from the computer. What was a suspicion is now a reality.

TRANSCRIPT

Sitting is Deadly Still-2_small.jpg
Narration
When you think about living dangerously – smoking, drinking and other risk taking behaviours may be the first things that come to mind. But if your days are anything like mine, one of your deadliest habits is one you indulge in most of your waking hours. It’s sitting. Yes, sitting.
Anja Taylor
Just think for a second about how many hours a day you sit. The tally may horrify you.
Narration
Most of us sit down for breakfast. We sit for our daily commute, sit down at our desks for a good eight hours and when we get home after a tiring day, we just can’t wait to sit down.
Assoc Prof David Dunstan
We’ve come to the reality now that we are a nation of sitters and for, for many people, they’re sitting for longer than they’re actually sleeping.
Narration
Researchers at the Australian National University and Sydney University have put a figure on just how deadly sitting can be.
Professor Emily Banks
So we followed two hundred thousand people aged forty five and over and over a three year period around five thousand of those people in the study died.
Narration
About seven percent of the deaths could be attributed to prolonged sitting.
Professor Emily Banks
What we found was that those who sat for prolonged periods of time, were more likely to die in the three years following the survey, than those who sat for shorter periods.
Anja Taylor
What about somebody who sits for more than eleven hours a day like me?
Professor Emily Banks
So we know that of the people who sat for eleven or more hours a day, they had a forty percent increasing risk of death compared to the people who sat for fewer than four hours.
Narration
People who sat for more than eight hours a day, were at a fifteen percent greater risk of early death.
Professor Emily Banks
And this was actually after we had accounted for things like age, smoking and as many other factors as we could think of.
Anja Taylor
They may sound like frightening statistics but the really depressing thing is even if I do the recommended daily amount of exercise, it still doesn’t cancel out the negative effects of sitting.
Narration
But don’t stop exercising. In the study, those who exercised regularly, were still at an increasing risk of early death the longer they sat but being inactive only adds to the risk. Those who didn’t exercise and sat the most, fared worst of all. So what exactly is it about sitting that’s so bad for you? At the Baker IDI Heart and Diabetes Institute in Melbourne, trial participants have been taking it easy.
Assoc Prof David Dunstan
When we are sitting, there’s no muscle contractions and, and why is that so important? Well muscle contraction helps the body’s efficiency to clear blood sugar levels, blood fat levels.
Narration
A high calorie meal raises blood sugar levels. In people who sit for long periods, those levels remain high for hours.
Assoc Prof David Dunstan
Well it’s known that elevated glucose levels can lead to inflammation which if repeated on a number of days or weeks, can lead to heart disease and, and a host of other conditions such as cancer.
Professor Emily Banks
So Andrew we’ll do your break and I’ll get you up on the treadmill.
Narration
But good news, breaking up sitting time can have a dramatic effect. A light two minute walk every twenty minutes is enough to lower blood glucose levels by around thirty percent.
Assoc Prof David Dunstan
There was no difference between doing light intensity walking or moderate intensity walking, so it doesn’t appear that there’s an intensity issue here, it’s the physical movement that’s important. What we need to start to incorporate is more movement throughout the day and an achievable way to do that is to not focus on having a seated posture throughout the day. I think the problem is that we have people just sitting throughout the day.
Narration
It sounds impractical but getting people up and moving could be a win win for business and workers.
Anja Taylor
Here at the Commonwealth Bank in Sydney, employees are trialling activity-based working.
Narration
In fact, it’s the largest example of its kind in the world. Workers here don’t have desks or landlines. Their day is spent roaming between chairs, standing desks and conference tables, depending on the task at hand. Big glass stairways encourage walking between floors.
Anja Taylor
Do you find that you get up more often than if you had a standard desk?
Employee
Oh absolutely. I move around a lot more in this environment, for sure.
Anja Taylor
For how long would you be sitting for?
Employee
Oh anything up to fifteen minutes at the most I’d say.
Narration
But the new work environment wasn’t designed for health.
David Craig
More than anything else it was about introducing a better culture of collaboration. This way people actually bump into each other, they interact and they innovate more. It just sort of gets them up and about and thinking.
Narration
It also saves on operating costs and waste.
David Craig
We’re using half the energy, we’re using less than half of the paper that we did before plus hopefully you, you know a better healthy outcome.
Assoc Prof David Dunstan
Once we talk about this and highlight the potential hazards, many people are quite reflective on, on their own lives. I’m more conscious of prolonged periods of sitting now than I ever was.
Narration
As for me, I’m trying hard every day to kick my sitting habit and when there’s no seat left on the train, I smile and consider myself lucky.
Topics: Health, Others
  • Reporter: Anja Taylor
  • Producer: Anja Taylor
  • Researcher: Anja Taylor
  • Camera: Greg Heap
    Rod Coats
  • Sound: Stephen Ravich
    Graham Fettling
  • Editor: Toby Trappell

Story Contacts:

Assoc Prof David Dunstan Baker

IDI Heart and Diabetes institute,
Melbourne, VICProfessor Emily Banks
ANU College of Medicine, Biology and Environment,
Canberra, ACT

Baker IDI study – health benefits of breaking up prolonged sitting

Sax Institute 45 and Up Study – effects of prolonged sitting

^ top (link)

About Ken McMurtrie

Retired Electronics Engineer, most recently installing and maintaining medical X-Ray equipment. A mature age "student" of Life and Nature, an advocate of Truth, Justice and Humanity, promoting awareness of the injustices in the world.
This entry was posted in Computer, Excercise, HEALTH, Human Behaviour and tagged , , , , . Bookmark the permalink.

4 Responses to Proven Health Risks from Sedentary lifestyle.

  1. ggita32 says:

    Hope all is well Ken..

    We all just commented that we miss your visits at the site and was wondering what happened. Crystal had mentioned that you we not well just recently.

    Normally arterial blockages don’t just happen over night and the reasons are complex and numerous that stretch over ones life time. Certain life styles do bring on problems more rapidly, especially when we reach the 50 and above age (I reached that a few years ago)…of course I’m no doctor but have had similar issues in my health.

    I also think that everyone that interacts on the internet goes through some different types of addictions and withdraws..It is a strange beast… Everyone at TIP does no more than two days a week for a few hours each of those days,…often we just close shop to slow it down for a few weeks….. we learned many years ago that for what ever reasons the internet can take over ones life if one allows it. One needs to balance the real and virtual worlds. The internet is like most things in life….some good and some bad.

    Remember the old saying, everything in moderation even exercising and staying active :).

    Peace,

    Thomas

  2. Thanks Thomas, good advice.
    Peace also be with you!
    🙂

  3. Pingback: Scoop.it

  4. Pingback: yachtclubshipstore.com

Leave a comment