2-Minute Bursts of Movement Can Have Big Health Benefits
A new study confirms that you don’t have to do a hard
workout to reap the longevity rewards of exercise.
By Dani Blum New York Times
Dec. 8, 2022
Dashing up the stairs to your
apartment, weaving between commuters as you dart toward the train — those small
snippets of exercise, if they’re intense enough, can add up, according to a new
study. The paper is among the first to examine what many exercise scientists
have long hypothesized: A little bit of physical activity goes a long way, even
movement you might not consider a workout.
The paper, published today
in Nature Medicine, shows that tiny
spurts of exercise throughout the day are associated with significant
reductions in disease risk. Researchers used data from fitness trackers collected
by UK Biobank, a large medical database with health information from people
across the United Kingdom. They looked at the records of over 25,000 people who
did not regularly exercise, with an average age around 60, and followed them
over the course of nearly seven years. (People who walked recreationally once a
week were included, but that was the maximum amount of concerted exercise these
participants did.)
Those who engaged in one or
two-minute bursts of exercise roughly three times a day, like speed-walking
while commuting to work or rapidly climbing stairs, showed a nearly 50 percent
reduction in cardiovascular mortality risk and a roughly 40 percent reduction
in the risk of dying from cancer as well as all causes of mortality, compared
with those who did no vigorous spurts of fitness.
The new research is part of a
long tradition of research into quick blasts of exercise, usually with
traditional workouts, like running on a treadmill or using an elliptical
trainer at the gym. Interval training, which means engaging in short stretches
of increased power or speed during a longer workout, has long been popular in
the athletic world, said Jamie Burr, an associate professor of human health and
nutritional sciences at the University of Guelph in Ontario who was not
involved with the research.
One 2020 study linked four-minute
bursts of exercise with longer life
spans; another in 2019 found that climbing stairs for 20 seconds, multiple times a day, improved aerobic fitness. And
still others have found that repeating just four-second
intervals of intense activity could
increase strength or counteract the
metabolic toll of sitting for long
stretches of time.
“Intensity is very effective
at building muscle and stressing the cardiovascular system,” said Ed Coyle, a
professor of kinesiology and health education at the University of Texas who
has researched intense bursts of exercise. Quick blasts of vigorous exercise, performed
repeatedly with short rest periods, can increase oxygen uptake and keep cardiac
arteries from clogging, he said, as well as power the heart to pump more blood
and function better overall.
The new study, however, shows
that the average person doesn’t need to go out of their way to identify those
small spikes in activity; everyday movements, intensified, can be enough. And
because they collected data from trackers that participants wore on their
wrists, rather than questionnaires, which some exercise studies rely on, the
researchers were able to analyze the impact of minute movements.
“It really just emphasizes how
little vigorous physical activity can be extremely beneficial,” said Martin
Gibala, a professor of kinesiology at McMaster University in Ontario who was an
author on the study.
Fitness researchers lump
exercise intensity into three categories, said Emmanuel Stamatakis, a professor
at the University of Sydney’s Charles Perkins Centre and the lead author of the
new study. If you can sing while doing the activity, that’s light exercise. If
you can’t sing, but you can speak comfortably, that’s moderate. Dr. Stamatakis
recommended movements that are so vigorous you can only speak a few words, or
none at all, after 30 seconds or so.
For those who exercise
regularly, you can tap into some of the benefits of short bursts by adding a
sprint into your run or bike ride, Dr. Burr said. “Even a few bouts in someone
who’s well trained can add a little spice to it,” he said.
Dr. Stamatakis also offered a
few ways for people to incorporate small bouts of movement into their lives. If
you have a roughly half mile-long walk — for example, from your apartment to
the grocery store — you don’t need to sprint the entire time, he said, but
accelerate your pace for a few hundred feet two or three times over the course
of your walk. Instead of taking the elevator, opt for the stairs. As long as
you go up more than one or two flights, that will count as vigorous activity.
Carrying roughly five percent of your body weight for a minute or two can also
qualify, like hauling a large backpack, he added. And any kind of brief, fast
uphill walking can also provide a short spurt of intense exercise.
“It doesn’t have to be planned
throughout your day — you’re playing with your kids, you can engage with them
in a more vigorous manner,” Dr. Gibala said. “You’re bringing your groceries
out from the car, you can pick up the pace. You can say: these are my
activities of daily living, I can huff and puff a bit while I’m doing this.”
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