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Get Healthy!

  • Posted February 20, 2024

Can't Exercise Every Day? Weight Loss Is Still Possible

Folks can lose weight even if they pack all their weekly exercise into one or two days, a new study finds.

Guidelines recommend that people get at least 150 minutes a week of moderate physical activity or 75 minutes a week of vigorous exercise.

"Weekend warriors"who condense all that exercise into one or two days each week can lose about the same amount of weight as people who perform shorter sessions across more days, researchers report Feb. 20 in the journal Obesity.

That's good news for people who find it hard to fit physical activity into their daily lives, researchers said.

"The weekend warrior pattern is worth promoting in individuals who cannot meet the recommended frequency in current guidelines,"said study author Lihua Zhang, a health care researcher at Fuwai Hospital's National Center for Cardiovascular Diseases in Beijing.

Zhang noted that office employees, bus drivers and other workers who have to sit for most of the workday could benefit from such an approach to exercise.

"Those people are struggling to catch up in their exercise plan in daily life to offset the hazard of a sedentary lifestyle but have less free time to get to the gym,"Zhang said in a journal news release. "Our study could offer them an alternative choice to keep fit."

For the study, researchers analyzed data on more than 9,600 participants in an annual U.S. health and nutrition survey from 2011 to 2018. Participants ranged in age from 20 to 59.

Survey results revealed that about 772 people stuck to a weekend warrior pattern of exercise, 3,277 engaged in a regular physical activity pattern that met the guidelines, and 5,580 were sedentary.

The weekend warrior and regular exercise groups both had lower belly fat, waist circumference, body fat mass and body mass index than those who were inactive, results show.

"On a high level, this study reaffirms the old adage about physical activity and health: any activity is better than no activity,"said Dr. Beverly Tchang, an endocrinologist with Weill Cornell Medicine's Comprehensive Weight Control Center in New York City.

"Notably, the weekend warriors' workout was of higher intensity and longer duration, and more intensity and longer duration correlated with even lower abdominal fat,"said Tchang, who was not involved in the study. "The main takeaway, though, is that people should be active in any manner that suits their lifestyle."

More information

The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services has more on the physical activity guidelines for Americans.

SOURCE: The Obesity Society, news release, Feb. 20, 2024

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