For immediate release
August 1, 2007
UPDATED PHYSICAL ACTIVITY GUIDELINES RELEASED
TODAY
American College of Sports Medicine and American Heart
Association provide physical activity recommendations for adults and
older adults
INDIANAPOLIS – All healthy adults ages 18 to 65 years need
moderate-intensity aerobic physical activity for at least 30 minutes on
five days each week or vigorous-intensity aerobic physical activity for
at least 20 minutes on three days each week, according to updated
physical activity guidelines released today by the American College of Sports Medicine (ACSM)
and the American Heart
Association (AHA).
Further, adults will benefit from performing activities that maintain
or increase muscular strength and endurance for at least two days each
week. It is recommended that 8-10 exercises using the major muscle
groups be performed on two non-consecutive days. To maximize strength
development, a resistance (weight) should be used for 8-12 repetitions
of each exercise resulting in willful fatigue.
The preventive recommendation specifies how adults, by engaging in
regular physical activity, can promote and maintain health, and reduce
risk of chronic disease and premature death.
A companion recommendation similar to the updated ACSM/AHA
recommendation for adults is specifically applied to adults aged 65 and
older, and adults aged 50-64 with chronic conditions or physical
functional limitations (e.g. arthritis) that affect movement ability or
physical fitness.
The recommendations are an update and clarification of the 1995
recommendation from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC)
and ACSM on the types and amounts of physical activity needed by healthy
adults to improve and maintain health. The intent is to provide a
more comprehensive and explicit public health recommendation for adults
based upon available evidence of the health benefits of physical
activity.
The core recommendation remains fundamentally unchanged despite more
than 10 years passing since it was issued. New science has been
evaluated to understand the biological mechanisms by which physical
activity provides health benefits and the physical activity profile
(type, intensity, amount) that is associated with enhanced health and
quality of life. This publication reflects a review of that
evidence, and considers key issues not fully clarified in the original
recommendation.
The updated recommendation for adults is improved in several
ways.
1. Moderate-intensity physical activity has been
clarified.
The 1995 document specified “most, preferably all days
per week” as the recommended frequency while the new
recommendation identifies five days per week as the recommended
minimum.
2. Vigorous-intensity physical activity has been explicitly
incorporated into the recommendation.
To acknowledge both the preferences of some adults for
vigorous-intensity physical activity and the substantial science base
related to participation in such activity, the recommendation has been
clarified to encourage participation in either moderate- and/or
vigorous-intensity physical activity. Vigorous-intensity physical
activity was implicit in the 1995 recommendation. It is now
explicitly an integral part of the physical activity recommendation.
3. Specified: Moderate- and vigorous-intensity activities are
complementary in producing health benefits, and a variety of activities
can be combined to meet the recommendation.
This combining of activities is based on the amount (intensity
x duration) of activity performed during the week and uses the concept
of METs (metabolic equivalents) to assign an intensity value to a
specific activity.
4. Specified: Aerobic activity is needed in addition to
routine activities of daily life.
The updated recommendation now clearly states that the
recommended amount of aerobic activity (whether of moderate- or
vigorous-intensity) is in addition to routine, light-intensity
activities of daily living, such as self care, casual walking or grocery
shopping, or that last less than 10 minutes, such as walking to the
parking lot or taking out the trash. Few activities in
contemporary life are conducted routinely at a moderate intensity and
last for at least 10 minutes. However, moderate- or
vigorous-intensity activities performed as a part of daily life (e.g.,
brisk walking to work, gardening with shovel, carpentry) performed in
bouts of 10 minutes or more can be counted towards the recommendation.
This concept was implied but not effectively communicated in the
original recommendation.
5. “More is better.”
The new recommendation emphasizes the important fact that physical
activity above the recommended minimum amount provides even greater
health benefits. The point of maximum benefit for most health benefits
has not been established but likely varies with genetic endowment, age,
sex, health status, body composition and other factors. Exceeding
the minimum recommendation further reduces the risk of
inactivity-related chronic disease. Although the dose-response
relation was acknowledged in the 1995 recommendation, this fact is now
explicit.
6. Short bouts of exercise are OK.
The original recommendation introduced the concept of accumulating short
bouts of physical activity toward the 30-minute goal, but there was
confusion about how short these episodes could be. For
consistency, the minimum length of these short bouts is clarified as
being 10 minutes.
7. A muscle-strengthening recommendation is now
included.
Muscle-strengthening activities have now been incorporated into the
physical activity recommendation. The 1995 recommendation
mentioned the importance of muscular strength and endurance but stopped
short of making specific declarations in this area. Available
evidence now allows the integration of muscle strengthening activities
into the core recommendation.
8. Wording has been clarified.
Minor wording changes in the recommendation have been made to enhance
clarity in communications. For example, the term
“aerobic,” or endurance, has been added to clarify the type
of physical activity being recommended and to differentiate it from
muscle-strengthening exercises, which are now part of the core
recommendation.
The updates also provide a clearer sketch of what combinations of
moderate- and vigorous-intensity activity can be performed to meet this
recommendation. Moderate-intensity aerobic activity is described
as generally equivalent to a brisk walk, or activity that noticeably
accelerates the heart rate.
The recommendations also summarize new research that links muscular
strength to health benefits, such as protection against bone loss and a
decreased risk of all-cause mortality.
The updated recommendations emphasize that relatively modest amounts
of physical activity will improve health; physical activity for
cardiorespiratory fitness and expanded health gains, such as weight
loss, may require more than a minimum 30 minutes of moderate activity
most days of the week. In general, there are more agreements than
differences when it comes to physical activity recommendations.
Differences on “minutes-per-day” recommendations appear
because they are intended for different groups, and may be
gender-specific or relevant to overweight or obese individuals.
The papers have published jointly in Medicine & Science in Sports
and Exercise®, ACSM’s official journal and Circulation, a
journal of the American Heart Association. For more information or
additional details on the physical activity guidelines, please visit www.americanheart.org/fitness
or www.acsm.org.
-30-
About the American College of Sports Medicine
ACSM is the largest sports medicine and exercise science organization in
the world. More than 20,000 international, national, and regional
members are dedicated to advancing and integrating scientific research
to provide educational and practical applications of exercise science
and sports medicine.
About the American Heart Association
Founded in 1924, the American Heart Association today is the
nation’s oldest and largest voluntary health organization
dedicated to reducing disability and death from diseases of the heart
and stroke. These diseases, America’s No. 1 and No. 3
killers, and all other cardiovascular diseases claim over 870,000 lives
a year. In fiscal year 2005–06 the association invested over
$543 million in research, professional and public education, advocacy
and community service programs to help all Americans live longer,
healthier lives. To learn more, call 1-800-AHA-USA1 or visit
americanheart.org.
The authors of “Physical Activity and Public Health: Updated
Recommendation for Adults from the American College of Sports Medicine
and the American Heart Association,” are William L. Haskell,
Ph.D., FACSM (Chair); I-Min Lee, M.D., FACSM; Russell R. Pate, Ph.D.,
FACSM; Kenneth E. Powell, M.D.; Steven N. Blair, P.E.D., FACSM;
Barry A. Franklin, Ph.D., FACSM; Caroline A. Macera, Ph.D., FACSM;
Gregory W. Heath, Ph.D., FACSM; Paul D. Thompson, M.D., FACSM; and
Adrian Bauman, Ph.D.
The authors of “Physical Activity and Public Health in Older
Adults: Recommendation from the American College of Sports Medicine and
the American Heart Association,” are Miriam E. Nelson, Ph.D.,
FACSM; W. Jack Rejeski, Ph.D.; Steven N. Blair, P.E.D., FACSM; Pamela W.
Duncan, Ph.D.; James O. Judge, M.D.; Abby C. King, Ph.D., FACSM; Carol
A. Macera, Ph.D., FACSM; and Carmen Castaneda-Sceppa, M.D., Ph.D.
Editor’s note: The American Heart
Association’s Choose To Move is a free 12-week
program that helps busy women increase physical activity and build
healthy habits into their daily lives – without creating new
routines that take a lot of time and money. Program registrants receive
an easy, step-by-step poster for coordinating resistance training into
any fitness routine. Call 1-800-AHA-USA1 or visit choosetomove.org to begin the
program today.
Editor’s Note: In January 2007, the American
Heart Association introduced Start!, a national campaign calling on all
Americans and their employers to create a culture of physical activity
and health to live longer, heart-healthy lives. Through active,
year-round participation in walking, Start! supports the mission of the
American Heart Association, to reduce the risk of cardiovascular disease
and stroke. To learn more, call 1-800-AHA-USA1 or visit americanheart.org/start.
| physical activity guidelines, physical activity recommendations, recommendations,guidelines |
|