Bicycling, brisk walking help women control weight
June 29th, 2010 - 2:44 pm ICT by ANIWashington, June 29 (ANI): Bicycling and brisk walking help pre-menopausal women control weight, especially those who are overweight and obese, according to a new study.
Additionally, the research found that slower walking does not offer the same benefits as brisk walking.
Anne C. Lusk, of the Harvard School of Public Health, Boston, and colleagues, studied 18,414 women who participated in the Nurses’ Health Study II, which is an ongoing study of more than 116,600 U.S. female nurses who were age 25 to 42 when the study began in 1989.
The current evaluation included women who were premenopausal through 2005, focusing on weight change in participants between 1989 and 2005.
The 1989 baseline characteristics of the study found that 50 percent of the women spent time slow walking, 39 percent reported spending time walking briskly and 48 percent reported they spent time riding a bicycle. In 2005, participants on average reported spending more time walking briskly, some time walking slowly and the least amount of time bicycling.
Additionally, the average time spent sitting at home was five times as much as time spent in total activity.
According to the results of the study, women who did not bicycle in 1989 but increased their bicycling by 2005 were less likely to have gained weight, even when riding for five minutes a day. Even less weight gain was seen with greater duration of bicycling. Comparatively, women who initially bicycled for more than 15 minutes day in 1989 but decreased time by 2005 gained more weight.
Additionally, normal-weight women who bicycled more than four hours a week in 2005 had lower odds of gaining more than 5 percent of their baseline body weight, as reported in 1989, compared with those who reported no bicycling.
The authors also found that, “the benefits of brisk walking, bicycling and other activities were significantly stronger among overweight and obese women compared with lean women, whereas slow walking continued to show no benefit even among overweight and obese women.”
“Unlike discretionary gym time, bicycling could replace time spent in a car for necessary travel of some distance to work, shops or school as activities of daily living. Bicycling could then be an unconscious form of exercise because the trip’s destination, and not the exercise, could be the goal,” the authors said.
The study has been published in the Archives of Internal Medicine, one of the JAMA/Archives journals. (ANI)
- Almost half of Brazilians overweight - Apr 11, 2012
- Lifestyle intervention helps women cut pregnancy flab - Mar 01, 2011
- Back to square one after dieting? Blame your hormones - Oct 30, 2011
- Obese women face higher risk of vein clots - Apr 20, 2012
- Obese exposed to higher radiation levels - Apr 08, 2012
- Severely obese women need to watch weight during pregnancy - Feb 12, 2011
- How social influences affect weight status in young adults - Jan 12, 2011
- Overeating during pregnancy causes lifetime obesity - May 18, 2011
- Diet, exercise combination best way to lose weight - Apr 15, 2011
- Knee replacement surgeries take more time to conduct in overweight patients - Feb 19, 2011
- Obese and overweight women, kids think they weigh less - Mar 24, 2011
- Overweight people will stay that way for ever - Jul 26, 2011
- Weight loss program improves hot flushes in obese menopausal women - Jul 13, 2010
- Diet and exercise 'more effective for weight loss when combined' - Apr 15, 2011
- Short nighttime sleep duration among infants, young kids 'ups obesity risk' - Sep 07, 2010
Tags: amount of time, baseline body weight, baseline characteristics, bicycle, brisk walking, female nurses, five minutes, harvard school of public health, health study, june 29, lean women, lusk, menopausal women, nurses health, obese women, school of public health, spending time, study women, weight gain, weight women