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Item
#4
Feds
Say 70 Percent Not Exercising (What
percent are you?)
A
new government report says seven in 10 adults don't regularly
exercise and nearly four in 10 aren't physically active at all.
And
despite repeated warnings about the link between a sedentary
lifestyle and heart disease and diabetes, the figures haven't budged
from 1997 to 2001.
The
National Center for Health Statistics released the report last
Sunday to mark World Health Day as officials prodded Americans to do
something - anything - to become more active.
"Good
health is literally a walk away," said Health and Human
Services Secretary Tommy Thompson, who planned a 10-mile run to mark
the day. "You don't have to work up a big sweat at the gym or
become a long-distance runner."
The
report found only three in 10 adults were regularly physically
active - defined as a half-hour of light to moderate exercise five
times a week, or 20 minutes of vigorous exercise three times a week.
The study showed 38 percent reported no such physical
activity at all.
The
study was based on household interviews with 68,000 American adults
in 1997 and 1998, the latest year for which complete data are
available. Preliminary data for 2001 show virtually no change, the
NCHS said.
The
findings are particularly bleak in light of an alarming rise in
diabetes, especially among Americans in their 30s. The blood-sugar
disease is closely tied to obesity.
About
300,000 people a year in the United States die from diseases related
to inactivity.
In
addition to diabetes, lack of exercise can increase the risk of
heart disease and stroke.
The
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention issued a new booklet for
local leaders, exhorting them to motivate communities to become more
active.
"People
can take the stairs instead of the elevator, or even park the car
farther away at the grocery store," said Dr. David Fleming, the
CDC's acting director.
The
new report also provides a glimpse into some of the factors that may
influence how active a person is, and shows demographic groups that
need improvement. For example, adults who make four times the poverty level are
twice as likely to exercise than poor adults. The poverty level for
single adults is just under $9,000.
Adults
with better educations also tend to exercise more.
Married
people, both men and women, were more likely than singles to be
active. Single adults are more likely to prefer body-strengthening
activities, like lifting weights or calisthenics.
About
two-thirds of whites exercise at least some of the time, compared
with only half of black and Hispanic adults, the report found.
The
South trailed other regions in physical activity. The West led the
nation with about two-thirds of adults getting some exercise,
compared with just over half of Southerners.
On
the Net:National Center for Health Statistics:
http://www.cdc.gov/nchs
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News
Flash:
According
to Former Surgeon General Dr. C. Everett Koop, more than 300,000
Americans die each year from obesity-related illnesses—second only
to 400,000 for tobacco. This
means each day, over 800 Americans die from problems related to
obesity.
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