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Fitness
How much do you need to sweat to improve heart health?
Most studies focus on sustained aerobic exercise, but data suggests muscular strength also plays a role in reducing cardiovascular events.
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It would be remiss let February slip by without paying homage to Heart Month by acknowledging the role exercise plays in heart health.
There’s no disputing the positive effects exercise and physical activity have on cardiovascular health, with plenty of data suggesting that high levels of fitness can reduce mortality from cardiovascular events by upward of 50 per cent.
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That’s an impressive stat. But what’s more impressive is that taking up exercise after being diagnosed with heart disease can reduce the risk of a cardiac event by 70 per cent. And given that 2.6 million Canadians have one or more risk factors that increase their probability of having a heart attack or stroke, getting up and moving on a regular basis is a long-term investment in health and well-being.
The good news is that it doesn’t take a lot of exercise to enrich heart health. One hundred and fifty minutes of physical activity a week can significantly improve your risk profile. If that seems too daunting, consider boosting your daily step count. One thousand extra steps a day can reduce the risk of mortality by 23 per cent, with every 500 additional steps resulting in another drop of five to six per cent.
Most of the studies documenting the effects of exercise on the heart feature sustained aerobic exercise (walking, running, swimming, cycling), but there’s a significant amount of data suggesting that muscular strength also plays a role in reducing cardiovascular events.
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How strong do you need to be? A study of 1,104 active men noted that the more pushups they could do, the less likely they were to have a heart-related health scare. Men who performed more than 40 pushups benefited from a whopping 96-per-cent reduction in risk compared with those who could do less than 10 pushups.
There are fewer studies of heart disease in women, but the evidence that aerobic exercise reduces the risk of cardiovascular events in the female population is still strong. What isn’t as obvious is whether strength training, without the addition of cardio, offers the same reduction in risk in women as it does in men.
How can you check in on your heart health? Smart watches gather information on heart rate, VO2max (aerobic capacity) and heart activity in real time. They also provide users with high and low heart rate and irregular rhythm notifications, which can provide a warning should there be a sudden change in heart activity.
Thirty-two-year-old Nathan Gossett from Ottawa bought an Apple Watch to track his workouts. An avid exerciser, he hits the gym most days of the week. But one morning, he woke up to several notifications that he experienced atrial fibrillation (a heart arrhythmia where the heart beats in a rapid, chaotic rhythm).
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“At first the doctor didn’t take me seriously,” said Gossett when he reported his watch’s notifications. “But when I was hooked up to a monitor, I was in AFib.”
The medical team shocked his heart back into a normal rhythm, and after a series of tests, it wasn’t long before the otherwise healthy Gossett was back in the gym. But now his wrist is never without his watch.
As good as smartwatches are at detecting arterial fibrillation, they can’t be counted on to warn of an impending heart attack or give you a heads up if you have heart disease. Yet they can offer unprecedented insight into heart activity. A high resting heart rate is associated with an increased risk of cardiovascular disease, lower physical fitness, higher blood pressure and body weight. Studies suggest that a resting heart rate higher than 80 beats per minute is associated with a 33-per-cent increased risk for cardiovascular death and a 45-per-cent higher risk of all-cause mortality.
Exercise is one of the most effective ways to lower resting heart rate with aerobic exercise, strength training and yoga found to decrease heart rate by anywhere from two to five beats per minute. Endurance athletes can have resting heart rates in the 40s and low 50s.
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If you don’t have a smartwatch, there are several apps that can measure your heart rate by touching your finger to your phone’s camera. As a bonus, most apps and smart watches keep a log of your heart rate readings, which makes it easier to track any notable increases or decreases over time.
You can also measure your heart rate the old-fashioned way, by lightly pressing the pointer and middle finger to the neck (gently run your fingers down from your earlobe to rest just under the jawline) or on the inside of the opposite wrist. The best readings are done in the morning before caffeine, stress and exercise can influence heart rate. Keep a log over the course of the week and use the average count as your baseline. Over the next several weeks, change your exercise habits and see how your resting heart rate responds.
If you’re just getting off the couch, add an additional 1,000 steps to your daily routine. If you’re already exercising, try adding bouts of high-intensity exercise to your workouts. And don’t forget about consistency. It can take weeks or months before you notice a drop in your resting heart rate.
In the meantime, rest assured that your heart appreciates the extra effort.
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Fitness
I’m a running coach — I’ve just tested shoes actually designed for women’s feet, and they’re a total game changer
Why you can trust TechRadar
We spend hours testing every product or service we review, so you can be sure you’re buying the best. Find out more about how we test.
QLVR ENDVR: Two minute review
Most running shoes feel familiar for a reason: the formula has barely changed in millennia. We have archaeological evidence of shoes being fastened with “shoelaces” as far back as around 3,500 BC, yet the basic lace-up running trainer remains the default.
QLVR (pronounced “clever”) set out to challenge that. Its debut shoe, the ENDVR, is a laceless “running slipper” built around a women-specific mechanical structure, with a slip-on Wing Fit system inspired by the way a bird’s wing opens and closes around movement.
The brand’s core argument is blunt: most athletic shoes are designed on men’s lasts (the mechanical devise used by manufacturers to create the foot shape) and scaled down for women, even though women’s feet tend to have different shapes and pressure points. So, they decided to literally break the mould and design something specifically for women’s feet.
It sounds like a noble ambition, although it didn’t necessarily start out as one. Originally the company was focused on doing away with laces. But co-founder and footwear designer Martin Dean soon realised this would be impossible with a unisex shoe.
“We were tweaking the design but we couldn’t get it to work. The unisex fit system means it would just be too loose on the back of a woman’s foot,” said Dean.
“That’s when we realised that the majority of footwear is made to fit a man’s foot. So we thought ‘let’s launch this for women’.”
As a runner who often struggles with shoe fit, I could immediately relate to Dean’s explanation. I spend an inordinate amount of time fiddling with laces trying to get the fit around my ankle just right. I don’t want the laces to dig in, but I also don’t want my ankles rocking around. I also struggle with the width of running shoes finding that the toe box shape is never quite right. Typically, a lot of running technology, not just shoes but also some of the best running watches, are male by default.
When I heard about the QLVR ENDVR I was keen to try them out. Maybe, finally, this shoe would fit! Over the past couple of months, I’ve been testing the shoe on a range of activities. Treadmill intervals, 10k easy road runs, gym sessions and as an everyday trainer for trips around the shops.
As soon as I slipped the pair on they immediately felt different. But were they the shoe I was ultimately looking for?
What makes it different?
The ‘women-first’ part is not just a marketing line. QLVR is designed around a more ‘triangular’ female foot shape, with a narrower heel, wider toe area, and higher arches, rather than shrinking a men’s shoe and relying on laces to make up the slack.
The laceless part is the standout: the Wing Fit system is designed to sit in a closed, ‘laced-up’ position, flexing as you step in and then holding the rearfoot securely once your heel drops. In practice, it’s the first slip-on I’ve tried that feels like it’s meant to be run in. There is an immediate locked-in feel, and the foot is held snugly inside with minimal slippage. Being able to slip on a shoe and have the perfect heel fit straight away is a revelation.
Then there’s sustainability. QLVR leans hard into bio-based materials: a dandelion-derived foam it calls Dandelite, a Pebax Rnew polymer (from castor beans) for the Wing Fit system and propulsion plate, and a Tencel yarn upper made from eucalyptus fibres.
What it’s like to run in
The fit is the first shock. I used QLVR’s sizing guidance and went down to a UK 6.5 (I usually size up to a 7 in running shoes). Straight out of the box, they felt very snug: secure around the ankle and heel, with noticeably more arch presence than I’m used to.
But that sense of the arch’s prominence faded fast. Once I started moving, the shoe relaxed into something closer to a slipper-like comfort, without the wobbly, overly soft feeling some max-cushioned shoes can have. For easy treadmill miles, it’s been especially pleasant: quiet, stable, and easy to forget about.
The laceless convenience is not a gimmick, either. If you’re popping out for a short run, going from work to gym, or fitting training into the cracks of a day, sliding in and heading off is genuinely freeing. No lace bite across the midfoot, no fiddling to get heel lockdown just right. The rearfoot hold is simply “there” every time.
QLVR positions the ENDVR as a shoe that can handle everything from intervals to cross-training. Based on my testing, that checks out. It feels comfortable and controlled for steady running, and supportive enough for gym sessions where you’re moving laterally or lifting lightly.
But that doesn’t mean it’s perfect. For me, the snugness may be a limiter. On longer distances, feet swell and I like a little more room up front. With my toes close to the end of the shoe and a hint of heel rub developing, I’d be cautious about taking these beyond half marathon territory. But then again, they are designed as an all-round training shoe rather than a long distance running pair.
Grip has been mostly fine on roads, but on icy patches I felt less confident than in some of my regular winter-friendly trainers. And, subjectively, the look will be divisive: the Wing Fit silhouette is unapologetically bold, and personally I think they’re pretty ugly.
One extra practical win: QLVR says you can machine-wash the shoes cold after removing the insoles and using a laundry bag.
Price and availability
The QLVR ENDVR costs £165 ($233, AUS $311) and is sold direct from the QLVR website. QLVR says it ships worldwide, although its FAQ notes US shipping is temporarily on hold while it assesses the impact of new import tariffs. The pricing is pretty much on-par with mid-range running and gym shoes.
QLVR ENDVR: Specifications
|
Type |
Neutral multi-training |
|
Drop |
9mm drop with 35mm rear / 26mm forefoot stack height |
|
Weight |
270g (women’s size 6) |
Sizing note
QLVR’s current guidance is worth considering carefully, as it is a little contradictory. The product page and FAQ suggest the shoe can size up a bit small, recommending going up half or a full size if you’re between sizes. But the size chart says if you follow its guide you don’t need to go up in size, as toe wiggle-room is built in. This is why I opted for a 6.5 after measuring my feet according to their metrics. If I wanted to run longer distances in these shoes, I would definitely size up to 7.
QLVR: Scorecard
|
Category |
Comment |
Score |
|
Value |
Appropriate for mid-range shoes |
4/5 |
|
Design |
Innovative and interesting |
4/5 |
|
Performance |
Great for mid-distance |
4/5 |
QLVR ENDVR: Should I buy?
Buy it if…
Don’t buy it if…
First reviewed: March 2026
Fitness
Mere minutes of daily vigorous exercise can cut your risk of 8 diseases | CNN
Move more. Sit less. For many years, that’s been accepted guidance for people wanting to get healthier.
Now that message is getting refined, with a growing body of research suggesting that certain types of movements may be more beneficial than others when it comes to health benefits.
The intensity of your exercise may matter as well. A new study published in the European Heart Journal found that a small amount of vigorous activity may be linked to lower risk of eight different chronic diseases.
The findings raise questions about why intensity matters and how people can incorporate more intense exercise routines into everyday life. To better understand the study’s implications, I spoke with CNN wellness expert Dr. Leana Wen, an emergency physician and clinical associate professor at George Washington University. She previously served as Baltimore’s health commissioner.
Before beginning any new exercise program, consult your doctor. Stop immediately if you experience pain.
CNN: What did this study examine about exercise and its relationship to chronic disease?
Dr. Leana Wen: This investigation looked at how the intensity of physical activity is related to the risk of developing a range of chronic diseases. Researchers analyzed data from two very large groups in the UK Biobank, which is a long-term health study in the United Kingdom that tracks medical and lifestyle information from hundreds of thousands of participants. One group included about 96,000 people who wore wrist activity trackers that objectively measured their movement, and the other included more than 375,000 people who self-reported their activity.
The researchers followed participants over an average of about nine years and examined the development of eight conditions: major cardiovascular events, atrial fibrillation, type 2 diabetes, immune-related inflammatory diseases, fatty liver disease, chronic respiratory disease, chronic kidney disease and dementia, as well as overall mortality.
The key finding was that the proportion of activity done at vigorous intensity mattered. People who had more than about 4% of their total activity classified as vigorous had substantially lower risks of developing these conditions compared with people who had no vigorous activity at all. The numbers were stunning, with the participants having the following results:
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63% lower risk of dementia,
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60% lower risk of type 2 diabetes,
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48% lower risk of fatty liver disease,
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44% lower risk of chronic respiratory disease,
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41% lower risk of chronic kidney disease,
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39% lower risk of immune-mediated inflammatory diseases,
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31% lower risk of major cardiovascular events,
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29% lower risk of atrial fibrillation, and
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46% lower risk of death from any cause.
These results are amazing. Imagine if someone invented a medication that could reduce the risks of all these diseases at once — it would be very popular! Crucially, even people who exercised a lot still benefited if the proportion of time they spent doing vigorous physical activity was increased. Conversely, people who were relatively inactive also benefited from adding just a little bit of higher-intensity exercise to their daily routines.
CNN: What counts as “vigorous” physical activity?
Wen: Vigorous activity is generally defined as exercise that substantially raises your heart rate and breathing. A simple way to gauge it is the “talk test.” If you can speak comfortably in full sentences while exercising, you are likely in the low to moderate range. If you are so out of breath that you can only say a few words at a time, that is vigorous.
Running, cycling, lap swimming or climbing stairs quickly could count. But this also depends on people’s baseline fitness. For some individuals, taking longer strides with walking can be vigorous exercise. Others who are already fairly fit would need to do more. It’s also important to remember that vigorous activity doesn’t have to be in the context of a structured exercise plan. Short bursts of effort in daily life, such as rushing to catch a bus or carrying heavy groceries upstairs, can also qualify if they raise your heart rate and make you breathless.
CNN: Why might higher intensity exercise provide additional health benefits?
Wen: Higher intensity activity places greater demands on the body in a shorter period. This type of movement can improve cardiovascular fitness, increase insulin sensitivity and support metabolic health more efficiently than lower-intensity activity alone. Some studies have also linked vigorous activity with cognitive benefits.
Greater intensity may have distinct benefits across different organ systems. The researchers found that some conditions, such as immune-mediated inflammatory diseases, appeared to be more strongly linked to the intensity of activity than to the total amount. On the other hand, type 2 diabetes and kidney disease were influenced by both how much activity people did and how intense it was. Why this is the case is not yet known, but intensity appears to have a significant impact across diseases affecting multiple organs.
CNN: How much vigorous activity do people need?
Wen: The threshold for people seeing a benefit appears to be relatively low. The researchers found that once people reached more than about 4% of their total activity as vigorous, their risk of developing chronic diseases dropped substantially.
To put that into practical terms, we are not talking about professional athletes dedicating their lives to hours of high-intensity training. Everyday people may see benefits from just doing a few minutes of vigorous effort daily.
CNN: How can people realistically incorporate vigorous activity into their daily routines?
Wen: One helpful way to think practically is that vigorous activity does not have to happen all at once. It can be accumulated in short bursts throughout the day.
People can take the stairs instead of the elevator and do so at a faster pace than usual. When they are heading to work, they can add some speed walking. They can park farther away when grocery shopping and walk briskly while carrying groceries.
Structured exercise also can incorporate intervals where people alternate between moderate and more intense effort. If you’re swimming laps, you can warm up at a more leisurely pace, then do a few laps at a faster pace, then again at a leisurely pace and repeat. This suggestion applies to any other aerobic exercise: Aim for multiple intervals of at least 30 seconds to a minute each where your body is working hard enough that you feel noticeably out of breath.
CNN: What about someone who is older or has mobility issues?
Wen: Not everyone can or should engage in high-intensity activity in the same way. Vigorous activity is relative to that person’s baseline. For someone who is not used to exercise, even a short period of slightly faster walking or standing up repeatedly from a chair could be considered high intensity. And not everyone may be able to walk. In that case, some exercises from the chair can have aerobic benefits.
Individuals who have specific medical conditions should consult with their primary care clinicians before embarking on a new exercise routine. People with mobility issues also may benefit from working with a physical therapist who can help to tailor exercises appropriate to their specific situation.
CNN: What is the key takeaway for people trying to improve their health?
Wen: To me, the main takeaway from this study is that it’s not only how much total exercise you get but also how hard you push yourself that matters. And you don’t have to have a lot of high-intensity exercise: Adding just a little has substantial health benefits across a wide range of chronic health conditions.
At the same time, exercise needs be practical. People should look for opportunities to safely increase intensity in ways that fit their daily lives. The most effective approach to physical activity is a balanced one: Exercise regularly, incorporate more challenging activities when you can and build habits that are sustainable over time.
Get inspired by a weekly roundup on living well, made simple. Sign up for CNN’s Life, But Better newsletter for information and tools designed to improve your well-being.
Fitness
‘Not what the fitness industry is trying to sell you’: this is the one simple move everyone really needs to be doing, according to an exercise scientist
Ask any exercise scientist what they would prescribe to someone serious about staying strong into their 50s and beyond, and the answer is rarely what you’d hope for — and certainly not what the fitness industry is currently trying to sell you.
It isn’t long sessions on one of the best under-desk treadmills or a stationary bike like the Peloton, nor the kind of machine-based exercises that isolate muscles without ever teaching them to work together.
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Most people are far weaker in this pattern than they realise and it’s exactly why we spoke to leading exercise scientist and functional medicine doctor Pete Williams to find out which single exercise he returns to again and again, why it becomes so critical at this stage of life and how to build it into your routine safely and progressively.
The forward lunge
“As we age, our exercise goals should evolve beyond simply lifting heavier weights,” says Williams. “For people over 50, the ability to generate force quickly — known as muscle power — becomes more crucial than maximal strength.” This methodology is exactly why Williams recommends the forward lunge as a key movement pattern for those looking to maintain strength for those in their sixth decade.
This particular focus on power over outright strength is rooted in Williams’ deep understanding of biomechanics. As we age, the ability to produce and maintain power “fundamentally shapes how we move, how we respond to sudden challenges, like trips or slips and how safely we navigate everyday life,” he says, noting that “power declines faster with age than strength alone.”
All of which make the forward lunge the ideal exercise to work on these points, Williams says, as it “builds not just muscle, but neural responsiveness and coordinated control.” By building the functional power to protect against falls and maintain independence in later life, he says, “power and control are the qualities that make movement safe and effective in the real world.”
Why it works
For Williams, the appeal of the forward lunge isn’t just about building lower-body strength, but also about recruiting and supporting the recruitment of the central nervous system (CNS).
“A forward lunge requires controlled descent into the lunge position, then a powerful push back to standing,” he explains. “This rapid coordination falls under the domain of the CNS, the brain and spinal cord must swiftly sense perturbations and activate muscles to respond.” Simply, by working on muscle power, you can offset the decline that comes with ageing.
Williams points to several everyday scenarios in which the forward lunge can help offset accident risk, including descending stairs, stepping down from curbs and lowering into a chair. “These are not passive movements, as they require muscles to absorb force, decelerate the body, and stabilize joints,” he says. This is called ‘eccentric’ control. Movement patterns that incorporate slow and controlled lowering trains these braking systems, making “accidents on stairs and curbs become far more likely”.
Most of the best smartwatches now come with fall detection, allowing the wearer to send an alert if they fall or have some sort of accident. For older adults, training with forward lunges will reduce the risk of this happening.
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Building power with the lunge
“Strength is a measure of how much force a muscle can produce, whereas power reflects how fast that force can be applied,” says Williams. To illustrate the difference, he describes two people: one who can lift heavy weights slowly, while the other can lift a medium weight faster. “If both trip on an uneven surface, the person with greater power — and thus faster muscle and neural response — is far more likely to catch themselves and avoid a fall”.
This is why Williams argues that exercise programs for older adults must move beyond purely heavy lifting.
Instead, they should incorporate “power training exercises,” such as “faster concentric lifts” and “quick sit-to-stands from a chair,” alongside “functional real-world drills”. This specific focus on “speed and rapid force production” is increasingly recommended for older adults and, according to Williams, “should always be considered.”
Add the lunge into your routine using the instructional video above, and browse our article series The Fit List for more muscle-building and life-lengthening advice.
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