Sydney: Office workers who sit for long periods of time can reverse the health risks of their modern sedentary lifestyle by exercising just 20 minutes per day, a new study has revealed, Wednesday.
Published in the ‘Journal of the American College of Cardiology’, the University of Sydney-led collaboration with the Norwegian School of Sport Sciences, Norwegian Institute of Public Health and the UK’s Loughborough University examined the health consequences associated with sitting.
By statistically modelling physical activity and sitting against the death records of nearly 1,50,000 study participants aged 45 years and over, the study found ‘physical activity is particularly important for people who sit a lot’.
“Reducing sitting would be a good start but is not enough,” lead author Professor Emmanuel Stamatakis, from the University of Sydney’s School of Public Health said. “In our study, sitting time was associated consistently with both overall premature mortality and cardiovascular disease mortality in the least physically active groups – those doing under 150 minutes of moderate to vigorous intensity physical activity per week.
“But one hour of physical activity per day is not necessary. Meeting the Australian public health recommendation of 150 to 300 minutes per week — equivalent to around 20-40 minutes per day on average — appeared to eliminate sitting risks.”
With many public health professionals growing increasingly concerned about the health risks associated with sitting, Stamatakis said that she hopes the findings of the study will act as a wake-up call to office workers leading sedentary lifestyles who don’t get ‘enough exercise’.