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NEWS RELEASE
April 5, 2005
For immediate release
Contact:
Christa Dickey
cdickey@acsm.org
WOMEN WITH PEDOMETERS STEP UP EXERCISE
LEVELS
10,000-step goal leads to more activity than 30-minute walk for study
participants
INDIANAPOLIS – Women with pedometers and a goal of 10,000 steps
per day walked more than those whose goal was a brisk, 30-minute walk,
according to new research published in the April issue of Medicine &
Science in Sports & Exercise®, the official journal
of the American College of Sports Medicine (ACSM). The study outcomes
contribute to a widespread effort to promote fitness with the use of
step-counting devices to increase physical activity.
The study followed 58 women who were physically inactive before the
study, averaging fewer than 7,000 steps a day. Participants were divided
into two groups:
- A “30-minute group” instructed to take a brisk, 30-minute
walk on most, preferably all, days of the week
- A “10K group” instructed to walk 10,000 steps per day
All participants wore sealed pedometers that recorded the steps taken
each day. To establish baseline levels of activity, steps were measured
for 14 days. During the four-week experiment, the 10K group also wore
pedometers that were not sealed, allowing participants to track their
steps throughout the day. Thirty-minute walkers kept activity logs
recording when the pedometer was put on and taken off each day, along
with their timed walking bouts. Those in the 10K group logged when the
pedometer was put on and taken off, as well as total steps accumulated
each day. They also had the option to record which physical activities
they performed to reach the goal of 10,000 steps per day.
Results:
- Over the four-week intervention, the 30-minute group accumulated an
average of 8,270 steps per day and the 10K group averaged 10,149 steps
per day.
- On days when they met their target, the 10K group averaged 11,775
steps compared with 9,505 for the 30-minute group.
- On days when they did not meet their target, 10K walkers still
averaged significantly more activity than the 30-minute group (7,780 and
5,597 steps, respectively.)
- Compared with their baseline step count before the four-week
experiment, the 10K group averaged significantly more steps even on days
when they did not meet their goal of 10,000 steps. Step counts for
participants in the 30-minute group were about the same as their
baseline levels on nonattainment days.
“Pedometers are quite popular now, and with good reason,”
said lead researcher Dixie L. Thompson, Ph.D., FACSM. “Our study
shows that they can provide an incentive for people to increase their
activity levels. Study participants who monitored their daily steps with
pedometers tended to walk more every day, even when they were below
their goal of 10,000 steps per day. For many individuals, walking is the
preferred way to reach ACSM’s recommended level of physical
activity, which contributes directly to better fitness and health. In a
society where poor diet and physical inactivity contribute to nearly
400,000 deaths a year, increasing our level of physical activity has a
very beneficial effect on public health.”
The American College of Sports Medicine 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.
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NOTE: Medicine & Science in Sports &
Exercise® is the official journal of the American
College of Sports Medicine, and is available from Lippincott Williams
& Wilkins at 1-800-638-6423. For a complete copy of the research
paper (Vol. 37, No. 4, pages 676-683) or to speak with a leading sports
medicine expert on the topic, contact the Department of Communications
and Public Information at 317-637-9200 ext. 127 or 117. Visit ACSM
online at www.acsm.org.
The conclusions outlined in this news release are
those of the researchers only, and should not be construed as an
official statement of the American College of Sports Medicine.
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