Sitting All Day is REALLY Bad for You!
Here's why
Here's why
July 2, 2014
By now, you may have heard of the emerging science showing the
dangers of sitting all day — and the health benefits of increasing the
amount of time you spend standing or walking on a daily basis.
It might not be a shock that sitting a lot makes you more likely to be obese. But scientists have found that, apart from obesity, excessive sitting is linked with all sorts of other health problems — even if you vigorously exercise after spending a work day in your chair.
Each hour you spend sitting shaves 21.8 minutes off your life expectancy
"What really surprised us was when our data began to show that people who sit longer are more prone to breast cancer, prostate cancer, cardiovascular disease, diabetes, hypertension, even depression," says James Levine, the Mayo Clinic endocrinologist whose research has largely jumpstarted the field of sitting science over the past few years.
Most recently, a review of 43 different studies published last week found that the amount of time you spend sitting increases your chance of colon, endometrial, and lung cancers. The bottom line is that each hour you spend sitting reduces your life expectancy by about 21.8 minutes, regardless of your exercise and diet (with a margin of error of 0.3 to 44.7 minutes for the study that arrived at this figure).
How does this work?
Here's an explanation of what we know about how sitting affects the human body.
Here's an explanation of what we know about how sitting affects the human body.
You burn 50 fewer calories
per hour when sitting
per hour when sitting
One way that sitting makes you more likely to become obese is pretty
straightforward: you burn fewer calories sitting all day, compared to
standing or walking. This is because your leg muscles need to work to
keep you upright and balanced, expending some energy.
It varies widely from person to person, but it's estimated that you burn an extra 50 calories per hour when standing, compared to sitting. This might not sound like a lot, but it adds up if you sit for eight hours per day, five days a week.
Standing just half that time means you'll burn an extra 1000
calories each week without changing your diet or exercise. Do it for a
year, and that's about 50,000 extra calories — the rough equivalent of
running 15 marathons.
Your muscles undergo other metabolic changes while sedentary
The effects of sitting go far beyond fewer calories burned — which explains why research has shown
that increased exercise for an hour or so per day can't undo the
negative effects of sitting for eight hours, any more than running a
mile can erase the damage caused by a smoking habit.
idle muscles release lower amounts of lipase, an important enzyme
Various metabolic changes that occur in sedentary muscles seem to be the culprit. They're still not well understood, but one likely explanation is that idle muscle cells release much lower amounts of lipase, an enzyme that's important for eliminating fats from the bloodstream and maintaining high levels of "good" cholesterol.
Another likely cause is that our bodies become more resistant to insulin when consistently sedentary. The expression of genes involved in suppressing inflammation is also altered when we sit, and may contribute to the increased cancer rates observed in people who sit a lot.
Ultimately, all of these mechanisms — along with others we
still haven't detected — probably contribute to the insidious health
cost of sitting all day.
This increases the risk of cardiovascular disease,
diabetes, and cancer
diabetes, and cancer
The effect of these mechanisms is seen in epidemiological studies
that link a sedentary lifestyle with an increased risk of cardiovascular
disease, diabetes, cancer and other health problems. Put simply,
sitting for most of your waking hours — like the 50 to 70 percent of Americans who sit for six or more hours per day — shaves years off your life.
adults who spend four or more hours per day sitting and watching tv have a 125 percent increased risk of cardiovascular disease
Time spent watching TV is often used as a convenient metric for sitting at home, since people tend to more accurately report how they watched TV on a given day than how long they sat. And research has found, for instance, that compared to adults who spend two or fewer hours per day sitting and watching TV, those who spend four or more have a 125 percent increased chance of heart attack, chest pain, or other symptoms of cardiovascular disease, even when controlling for diet and exercise.
Other work has found that adults who spend the most time sitting have a 112 percent increased chance of developing type 2 diabetes — and that for adults already at risk of developing diabetes, time spent sitting is a bigger risk factor than getting enough exercise.
All this also applies to cancer. "We observed that each 2-hour
per day increase in sitting time was associated with increased risks of
cancers of the colon and endometrium, and with a borderline significant
increased risk of lung cancer," says Daniela Schmid, lead author of the recent analysis of sitting and cancer risk. "The
results were independent of physical activity, showing that sedentary
behavior represents a potential cancer risk factor distinct from
physical inactivity."
These are all correlations, not causations. But they're reinforced by controlled studies in both human and animals showing the metabolic changes that occur in sedentary muscles. And these correlations persist when researchers control for physical activity, diet, smoking, and other health metrics. In other words, even if two people eat the same foods and work out the same amount, the data tells us that the person who sits more every day will be more likely to develop cardiovascular disease, diabetes, and cancer.
Spend enough of your day in a desk chair, a driver's seat, or on a couch, and the effect adds up. One study found
that an adult who spends six hours a day sitting and watching TV will
live, on average, 4.8 fewer years than one who watches no TV, even if
they have the same diet and exercise.
To put it in more tangible terms: each hour of TV you sit and watch past the age of 25 is associated with a 21.8 minute reduction in your lifespan. Of course, there's some variation in this: if you're lucky, the reduction might be as small as 0.3 minutes, and if you're not, it could be as big as 44.7 minutes (this is the margin of error).
But on average, it's 21.8 minutes. Other researchers have calculated that each cigarette you smoke, in comparison, reduces your life expectancy by roughly 11 minutes.
So what should you do?
Fixing this problem doesn't necessarily require that you go out and
get a standing desk — although that isn't a bad idea. But the key, in
general, is to incorporate movement into every hour of your day.
The key is to incorporate some movement into every hour of your day
"Step one is to get up," Levin says.
"You've got to find systematic, organized methods to getting up more often."
There are lots of ways to do this. In an office, you could start by
getting up and walking around while on the phone, scheduling standing
meetings, or intentionally putting a garbage can or printer farther away
from your desk, so you need to walk a bit every so often to get there. If you do opt to try a standing desk, experts recommend taking sitting breaks to reduce the strain on your heels and knees.
At home, cut down on the amount of TV you watch, or even just take
your dog for a quick walk around the block during a commercial break. Research has shown that people who simply take short walking breaks of a few minutes during sedentary periods have lower rates of obesity and other risk factors for diabetes and cardiovascular disease.
Want an even more tangible way to remind you of the harms of sitting? Try our calculator. Enter in the number of hours you sit each week, and it'll tell you what researchers estimate is the associated reduction in your life expectancy:
Television Viewing and Time Spent Sedentary
in Relation to Cancer Risk:
A Meta-analysis
Daniela Schmid and Michael F. Leitzmann
http://jnci.oxfordjournals.org/content/106/7/dju098.full?_ga=1.42982689.527235840.1397574100
Actually Does to Your Body
http://mic.com/articles/91703/science-shows-what-happens-to-your-body-after-sitting-all-day-at-work?utm_source=policymicTBLR&utm_medium=main&utm_campaign=social
Killer Habit:
Why not even exercise will undo the harm of sitting all day
and what you can do about it
What to do
But there is some good news. Studies have found that simply interrupting your sitting time with short breaks of movement—just standing or walking slowly—has beneficial effects. In a 2008 study published in Diabetes Care, researchers from the University of Queensland in Australia equipped 168 adults with an accelerometer, measuring their every move for seven consecutive days. Those who took more breaks from sitting had narrower waists, and lower body mass index, triglycerides and glucose tolerance—all important measures for obesity and metabolic health. The average length of their breaks: just four and a half minutes.
Read More: http://qz.com/223160/why-not-even-exercise-will-undo-the-harm-of-sitting-all-day-and-what-you-can-do-about-it/
Television viewing time
and reduced life expectancy: a life table analysis
http://bjsm.bmj.com/content/46/13/927.full
What are the risks of sitting too much?
Answers from James A. Levine, M.D., Ph.D.
http://www.mayoclinic.org/healthy-living/adult-health/expert-answers/sitting/faq-20058005
Sitting all day is really bad for you.
Here's why
http://www.vox.com/2014/7/2/5862026/sitting-vs-standing-health-risks-dangers?utm_medium=social&utm_source=facebook&utm_campaign=ezraklein&utm_content=wednesday
http://www.diabetologia-journal.org/files/henson.pdf
Binge Watching Your Favorite TV Shows Could Be Killing You! Darn It, Science!
http://perezhilton.com/fitperez/2014-06-26-binge-tv-watching-dangerous-fatal-killing-you#.U7VuS7H5d6A
http://perezhilton.com/fitperez/2014-06-26-binge-tv-watching-dangerous-fatal-killing-you#.U7VuS7H5d6A
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