Connect with us

Fitness

Motivate yourself to walk more – Harvard Health

Published

on

Motivate yourself to walk more – Harvard Health

Need a little oomph to boost your daily step count? Try reminders or incentives, suggests a randomized controlled trial published online April 7, 2024, by Circulation. Researchers asked more than a thousand people (average age 67) to wear activity trackers, walk every day, and set step goals. Participants were then randomly assigned to one of four groups offering various nudges to exercise: the chance to win game points, the chance to earn money, the chance to get both money and game points, or a daily text message noting the previous day’s step count. After one year, people in all of the groups had added another 1,500 steps or more to their daily step totals. But compared to the message-only group, those in the money or game groups walked about 500 more steps per day, and those in the combined incentives group walked almost 900 more steps per day. Want to try it at home? Set an exercise reminder on your phone, and use a walking app that offers game points and rewards.


Image: © adamkaz/Getty Images

As a service to our readers, Harvard Health Publishing provides access to our library of archived content. Please note the date of last review or update on all articles.

No content on this site, regardless of date, should ever be used as a substitute for direct medical advice from your doctor or other qualified clinician.

Advertisement

Fitness

“We naturally lose muscle mass, reaction speed and balance as we age,” says this elite Hollywood coach who’s trained everyone from Margot Robbie and Scarlet Johansson to Richard Madden and Pedro Pascal — but recommends doing step-ups to undo the damage of aging in your glutes, quads and calves

Published

on

“We naturally lose muscle mass, reaction speed and balance as we age,” says this elite Hollywood coach who’s trained everyone from Margot Robbie and Scarlet Johansson to Richard Madden and Pedro Pascal — but recommends doing step-ups to undo the damage of aging in your glutes, quads and calves

There’s a reason why some of the most effective exercises tend to mirror movements in real life. It’s not because personal trainers and coaches lack imagination, but because the body doesn’t care how creative your programming is — it cares whether you can climb a flight of stairs without grabbing the banister, for example, or if you can catch yourself from a stumble.

These are just a few of the benchmarks that matter in later life, and for elite performance coach David Higgins — who has trained everyone from Margot Robbie and Scarlett Johansson to Samuel L. Jackson, David Harbour, Game of Thrones’ Richard Madden and the entire cast of The Batman, among many others — one exercise sits at the top of the list for anyone over 50: the step-up. Here’s why.

Lower-body power matters so much after 50

Continue Reading

Fitness

HFA Submits Comments to USTR Regarding Trade Policy – Health & Fitness Association

Published

on

HFA Submits Comments to USTR Regarding Trade Policy – Health & Fitness Association

HFA urges targeted trade policies to protect the fitness industry.

This week, HFA submitted comments to the Office of the US Trade Representative (USTR) on two important trade policy dockets that could have significant implications for exercise equipment manufacturers, suppliers, and fitness facility operators. 

Section 301 Tariff Proceeding
USTR sought comment on proposed tariffs from its Section 301 forced labor investigation, including possible product exclusions based on domestic availability and economic impact.

HFA submitted comments that advocated excluding exercise/rehabilitation equipment and critical components, citing irreplaceable global supply chains and the industry’s role in public health, chronic disease prevention, and military readiness.

US- China Board of Trade

Advertisement

USTR proposed a new Board to identify non-sensitive products for reciprocal tariff reductions with China.

In comments submitted to USTR, HFA recommended designating exercise equipment as “non-sensitive” and eligible for negotiation, prioritizing products that boost US manufacturing and affordability, and setting criteria recognizing public health, productivity, and military readiness benefits.

The HFA thanks member operators, manufacturers, and suppliers whose data strengthened these submissions. Your efforts are helping HFA advocate for trade policy that supports the fitness industry.

Continue Reading

Fitness

UnitedHealthcare rolls out wellness spending accounts for fitness, family planning

Published

on

UnitedHealthcare rolls out wellness spending accounts for fitness, family planning
The payer group said the new Lifestyle Spending Account will pay for the things not currently covered by other flexible spending accounts, such as consumer products to monitor nutrition and manage diabetes. The full list of options is presented in a new webstore.
Continue Reading
Advertisement

Trending