No time for a gym workout? How short bursts of exercise – 4 or 5 minutes a day – can help protect against cancer, heart disease and more
- Four or five minutes a day of vigorous intermittent lifestyle physical activity – Vilpa for short – may lower risk of cancers by up to 32 per cent, study says
- Routine activities can be made into a short exercise by tweaking their intensity. Pick up the pace when you walk; take the stairs when you can
If you have a gym membership but fail to use it – either regularly or at all – you’re not alone. According to fitness industry statistics, 67 to 80 per cent of people with a gym membership never go.
Our lives are busy, and finding 30 or 45 or 60 minutes a day, a few times a week, to get down to the gym is hard.
But here’s a little-known secret: there is tremendous value to incidental exercise – that is, the kind of exercise you do by accident, without really noticing and definitely without carving out a specific time for it or getting into Lycra to do it.
A recent study by University of Sydney researchers found that what they call “vigorous intermittent lifestyle physical activity” (Vilpa) – or what you might call short bursts of exercise – can provide great benefits, including lowering the risks of developing disease.
The researchers found “a strong association” between Vilpa and a lower risk for those cancers known to be affected by physical activity – which include lung, bowel, liver, kidney, head and neck, oesophageal, breast and endometrial cancers.
Too old to become active? Think again, says step-dancing 62-year-old
The study concluded that just four to five minutes of Vilpa daily was associated with a substantially lower cancer risk: a 17 to 18 per cent reduction in total incident cancer risk, and a 31 to 32 per cent reduction in risks for those cancers affected by physical activity.
In an earlier study, his team noted “strong and consistent associations” between this type of exercise and cardiovascular disease, an almost 50 per cent reduction in risk from three one-minute-long bouts of exercise a day on average.
The study observed more than 22,000 UK Biobank participants who had never been diagnosed with cancer – and who had never done any structured exercise such as going to the gym regularly – for almost seven years.
They were all required to wear fitness trackers so the details of all their activity – no matter how brief – as well as its intensity, could be monitored. The participants’ average age was 62.
According to the US Centres for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), older adults need at least 150 minutes of exercise a week – an intimidating number for anyone who isn’t fit but wants to get fitter.
Many people, especially those in their 60s, don’t fulfil this goal. But it is precisely then, as we age, that we need to be especially mindful of exercise.
If you start small – with an attainable at-home number in mind, say 3½ minutes a day – you’ll build your fitness naturally, and may soon find the CDC-prescribed 150 minutes a week within reach.
That might help you feel more confident about using a gym, too: often it is a lack of confidence that keeps people away from a fitness centre. Studies suggest even those under 35 report feeling self-conscious about using a gym; imagine what it feels like in your 60s.
Typical Vilpa activities “include bursts of very fast walking, walking uphill, walking carrying a backpack or shopping bags for a couple of hundred metres – from the store to your car, say, stair climbing, and vigorous domestic housework or gardening”, Stamatakis says.
“Many of our day-to-day routine activities can be converted to a burst of exercise by tweaking their intensity” – that is, doing them with a little more vigour, a little faster.
So step up your walking pace and do a walking sprint for one to two minutes during a longer walk, try to find a walk with a few hills, and do this intermittently. You’ll easily meet your three to five minutes for the day, he says.
You’ll know if you’re putting in the right effort when you feel your heart rate rising.
You want to notice your pace on a walk is increasing too, which is a good reason to invest in a fitness tracker or a smartwatch. A brisk walk means you’re reaching from 100 to 130 steps a minute – as compared to a slow walk of about 60 to 80.
And you definitely want to notice you’re puffing – a bit.