Fitness
Optimizing health through exercise – Mayo Clinic Press
We all know our bodies ages — but what if we could potentially halt or reverse that process through exercise? For some people, execise can preserve function, independence, and health span. So what kind of benefits can we expect? And what kind of exercise is best for optimizing health?
On this episode of Aging Forward, we talk with professor of physical medicine and rehabilitation Dr. Edward Laskowski about the role of exercise in healthy aging, exploring physical activity options for older adults and how to incorporate exercise into our day-to-day routines.
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Dr. Christina Chen: Welcome to “Aging Forward,” a podcast brought to you by the Department of Community Internal Medicine, Geriatrics and Palliative Care at Mayo Clinic on topics related to science of healthy aging and geriatric medicine. We are so honored to have with us Dr. Edward Laskowski, who is a professor of physical medicine and rehabilitation at Mayo. I just have to pause to brag about you a little bit because you are a legend on so many levels and I hope you know that I’ve been listening to your lectures since training and just marveled at your teachings and it’s just really nice to be able to sit with you today to chat about this topic in person on this podcast.
Dr. Edward Laskowski: Well, you are too kind. I’m honored to be here.
Dr. Christina Chen: Dr. Laskowski was the director of Mayo Clinic Sports Medicine. He has authored hundreds of publications. He has been awarded numerous awards for his academic achievements, and he’s also served on the President’s Council for Physical Medicine for two Presidents, Bush and Obama. As well as the physician for the 2002 Winter Olympics. Is there anything you can’t do?
Dr. Edward Laskowski: I’m really blessed to have those opportunities. It’s a privilege to take a message forward that we’ll talk about today, a very basic message, but a very important message.
Dr. Christina Chen: Absolutely. You are truly an expert in this domain and we’re excited to talk about how the science of physical activity can really empower all of us to take advantage of something that brings so many health benefits. Just starting with some basics here, some introduction into the benefits of exercise. We know that there’s a lot of literature out there, there’s ample evidence to support the benefits of exercise. Years and decades of research. Would you mind just summarizing that, if you can, under this time, but also what are the things that we don’t know that’s out there about the benefits of exercise?
Dr. Edward Laskowski: Great question. As you know, at Mayo, we do some pretty remarkable research and always, always looking to find things to improve patient care and patient health. What if I told you that there was a pill that reduced the death rate of breast cancer and the recurrence risk by fifty percent, lowered the risk of colon cancer by two thirds, that reduced the risk of Alzheimer’s by almost a half, that reduced heart disease and high blood pressure by almost a half, that lowered the risk of stroke by one third, that lowered the risk of type 2 diabetes by almost two thirds, and that treated depression as effectively as we can. Prozac or Cognitive and Behavioral Therapy.
Dr. Christina Chen: I would want that pill.
Dr. Edward Laskowski: I would too.
Dr. Christina Chen: How much does it cost?
Dr. Edward Laskowski: Exactly. I’d pay whatever and line up on whatever line I could to get that pill. Well, those are all evidence-based and voluminous evidence-based effects of physical activity. Very basic, but that it’s the magic pill that is free and that does so many wonders for our body, both physically and mentally.
We’re finding now in studies for depression risk the effect of exercise and improving that for anxiety, for the risk of Alzheimer’s, as I said, there’s some very nice research here at Mayo by Ron Peterson showing that mild cognitive impairment is reduced in populations who do physical activity on a regular basis.
Parkinson’s. You mentioned sports medicine. When I was there, we were the first line treatment for early onset Parkinson’s patients. Exercise. It’s that much evidence-based. And so and again, voluminous evidence is a lot of things in medicine. Now we’re trying with orthobiologics, regenerative medicine, a very exciting field, but where is it affected? There is voluminous amounts of evidence that physical activity has all these effects.
Dr. Christina Chen: Why do you think it’s so hard to take advantage of that? It seems like almost a common sense thing, and I struggle with this every day. Why is exercise so hard for the majority, but others find it therapeutic and easier to do? Is it all mindset? Is it building that habit into our day-to-day lives? Why is it so different for each person?
Dr. Edward Laskowski: It’s a great question. The physical activity guidelines for Americans are 150 minutes of moderate activity per week or 75 of vigorous activity. So that’s about 30 minutes, five days a week of moderate activity. But sometimes when people, if they’re not doing anything and they hear those numbers, they try and do it and they may get that 150, but they’re sore and they said this hurts and I’m done and I’m not doing it anymore. The good news is that all activity is cumulative.
We even had in our first physical activity guidelines a ten minute mark that you really should be doing ten minutes continuously to get the benefit. Now that’s out the window as well. It’s all beneficial. Movement is medicine. Any kind of movement is good. And I like to use the term physical activity instead of exercise, as exercise may imply putting on spandex, going into a health club and going somewhere, showering and coming back. And really it’s just any activity, anything that burns calories; taking a walk, swimming, playing tag with your kids.
All those movement-based activities are effective and they add up over time. If we can weave that into our day and not make it as onerous, the old park the car further away, take the stairs, all those seconds and minutes add up.
Families are very important too, doing things together. We live in a very busy society. People go on everywhere, but one strategy, if you’re eating dinner and you finished dinner, instead of sitting around the table, you go for a walk around the neighborhood. You bike together, you swim together, you hike together. All those things are very helpful. And I know we did that with our kids and we didn’t force them to do anything, but we just did stuff. And so now they do stuff. It’s just part of them. And if they don’t, they kind of feel bad that they didn’t get their activity in.
Getting that to be, like you say, a habit. And seeing the barriers everybody may have different barriers to exercise. I’m giving these lectures in large cities and I’ve had some people say, “I’m scared of my kids to go outside and play.” And that’s a real concern.
Finding strategies where that can be mitigated and indoor opportunities, things like that. And maybe there’s an education opportunity because maybe people think they have to run a marathon to be fit and get a health benefit and you don’t have to if you don’t want to, that’s a goal.
But again, any movement matters. Finding out what those barriers are, you can start very slow. I had a patient once, in his mid-fifties and he had early onset heart disease. He had high blood pressure, type two diabetes, was very obese, and had to use a walker to get around.
I said, “You know, we’ve got to change this.” He goes, “No, I’m too late, you can’t do this.” I said, “Yes, you can.” “No, you can’t.” We went back and forth, back and forth. Finally, we got him connected with one of our physical therapists, very nurturing physically for 60 to 90 seconds at first with his walker. But the next week he walked about 120 seconds and the next week, four minutes. And he came back about a year and three quarters later to show me he actually brought his old pants because he had lost 250 pounds.
Dr. Christina Chen: That’s amazing.
Dr. Edward Laskowski: He said, “Doc, take a picture of me because I didn’t do anything fancy. I didn’t join a fancy health club, I didn’t do a fad diet, I just tried to do what she said. I just tried to move and eat better.” Again it’s not that easy, but it’s an example of what we can really make. This guy changed his life. He’s now working in high mountain altitude rescue in Europe.
Dr. Christina Chen: Wow. All those little things that add up over time. That’s a really great pearl. You mentioned barriers and a lot of my patients tell me that age is my barrier and our bodies obviously change with time. I remember the day after my 40th birthday, and I’m not exaggerating, the day after, I got up from bed and just sitting up hurt my back.
I threw my back sitting up from bed. I’m like, “Oh my gosh, this is what they’re talking about. But with age, there’s a lot of physiologic changes that may impact our exercise capacity and our muscle function. Can you talk a little bit about that science and how that changes?
Dr. Edward Laskowski: Great point. There are changes that naturally occur in all of us as we get older. Our basal metabolic rate declines, our amount of lean muscle mass decreases. We have increased risk of some things like arthritis and certainly after age 65, the fall risk increases. Again, the good news is that again, many studies show that exercise can mitigate virtually every one of these effects.
And until we breathe our last breath, it is never too late. There are amazing studies out there. There was one study where they took 86 to 96-year-old individuals in a long term care facility and they gave them a strength training program. The average strength gain was 174 percent. Some gain almost 300 percent in their strength and that translates into functional difference.
People started getting up from chairs they couldn’t get up from before. They started being able to cross the street before the light turned red. It made a difference in their life. The good news is that God has made our body so that whenever we do good things, it’ll benefit from strength training.
When we lose lean muscle, if we strength train, we can maintain that. And then we don’t get as much fat accumulation as we do. If we did not, I really encourage my patients, like that individual we just talked about, and it’s never too late to start. And starting slow is not a bad thing. You don’t have to do incredibly intense, dramatic things.
Dr. Christina Chen: You just answered my next question: can reconditioning reverse or halt this process? And like they say, if you don’t use it, you lose it. If you work at it, you can gain it back. And so it’s encouraging to hear that even for older adults who feel like there’s no turning back. There’s always an opportunity to reverse that process.
Dr. Edward Laskowski: Absolutely. And just like when we stop smoking, our lungs start to regenerate and get healthy again. When we start to do these good things for our body, aerobic activity, strength training, and the stability training, we start to get healthy in those areas and our muscles respond, they get stronger. Always encourage people that we can always make a difference.
Dr. Christina Chen: One of the biggest challenges is people just don’t know where to start. What does an exercise prescription look like for each person because it’s so different based on their functional abilities and what they’re able to start with. In your experience, what does it look like? What does an exercise prescription look like that can be effective and can promote consistency over time?
Dr. Edward Laskowski: That’s a great question. For heart health and for cardiovascular there’s no ideal piece of exercise equipment. I always tell people it’s really nice to do something you like to do. If you like to walk, that’s great. You don’t even have to run. You can get all the same benefits. If you like to swim, great. If you like to bike, great. If you like to use machines, great. Some people get energized and charged up by going to a health club and that type of environment. Some people like to do stuff on their own.
Finding where that niche lies and in each person. And again, just starting slow means that you don’t have to do these real dramatic things, intense workouts that all add up over time. Again an education area that we can enhance in some people. Things like that.
Dr. Christina Chen: Kind of getting creative with what’s within their environment, what’s feasible and what they can get started with even in their own homes.
Dr. Edward Laskowski: Exactly. The components we want to add, you want some kind of heart health. Whether it’s walking, biking, whatever, some movement that makes our heart stronger. Strength training is also very important. And again it doesn’t mean professional bodybuilders or professional weight lifters. It just means mitigating some of those effects that happen with age.
We lose lean muscle mass. Let’s replace it. And when we start strength training, we do increase our lean muscle mass. That burns more calories. That gives us more powerful muscles to protect joints. Muscles unload the joints. Even people with arthritis and all the strength training, are very important. Now, if you have a condition like arthritis, there may be some special considerations. You want to maybe do some low impact aerobic conditioning.
If you have some knee arthritis or some hip arthritis, walking is low impact. Biking is as well. Swimming also, or if you don’t like to swim, even walking in the water. If you get in the shallow end, get the water about chest level, the buoyancy of the water takes the load off your joints, but it gives you resistance to go again. It gives you a workout. Incorporating some of that strength training as well.
Flexibility. We term it the range of motion about a joint. You really want the optimal range of motion about the joint to get the muscle to function well. And what we’re finding is that everybody’s different. Not everybody can be a ballerina or a gymnast, but equalness side to side is very important. Symmetry. If we’ve had a hamstring strain, there might be some tightness on that side as compared to the other.
We want to get that back. We want to get that equal because over time that tightness and that imbalance may lead to some overload and to some tissue problems. The last thing too is stability training because falls are just a huge issue, a 6 billion dollar problem in our healthcare economy, the sequelae of falls. You can fall and break a hip, you can get a subdural hematoma. We really want to work on that. And the system we want to work on is the stability system. And we think of the big three as being the cardiovascular, the flexibility and the strength. I actually added a fourth: the stability system. Because it’s different.
You can be very aerobically fit and not stable. You can be very strong and not stable, very flexible and not stable. You have to train stability separately, but simple stuff will do. When you’re brushing your teeth, stand on one leg and you can hold on to the counter initially if that’s difficult, but the more we challenge that system of stability the better we’ll get. And studies have shown even Tai Chi, which is a very gentle movement-based therapy, practitioners of Tai Chi have a lower risk of hip fractures and falls than those who don’t.
Dr. Christina Chen: It sounds complex for a patient. I think these four pillars that you mentioned are critical components of not just cardiovascular health, but balance and stability and muscle integrity. And when they hear about all these different areas, they have to work on, the first thing just sounds way too much. And can someone help me do this? Can someone guide me through this or a fitness coach? And again, that requires another resource, right? And like you mentioned, all of this is so important to fall prevention. How do you approach that mindset of, “That’s just way too much for me to do.”
Dr. Edward Laskowski: That’s a great question. I’m a great barrier for many people. Weaving things into your life so that any movement is up to you. The simple stuff works. If you’re at a desk job a lot, it’s good to get up and move every half an hour, set a timer, even just two to three minutes. We’ve got studies that show that sedentary lifestyle, even if you get those minutes, you’re at risk if you sit for eight hours a day, nine hours a day at a computer and in our culture now, that’s a big issue.
Just weaving those things into your day, those movement areas, the strength training. The good news is we don’t have to spend a lot of time doing it. And you may have heard of the principle of sets of exercise and some people saying, “Oh, I’ll do three, I’ll do six sets.” You can get a very good benefit from a single set of exercise performed to muscle fatigue. That reduces the time it takes to do this considerably. And again, you don’t have to, and in fact, you shouldn’t do strength training with the same muscle group every day.
You should wait at least a day in between. Even a two-day a week strength program is going to reap a tremendous amount of benefit. And again, that can be simple. You can start out with soup cans, simple weights that you can do at home, or you can go to a health club if you like that better.
But simple things really help. Flexibility. Again, stretching in five minutes. You can stretch major muscle groups. And we have, for people interested on mayo clinic.org, if you search the strength training videos, if you just put strength, you’ll get 35 videos of how to do strength training with just your body weight with resistance tubing, with free weights and with machines.
And we really focus on doing it right because that’s what a lot of the things and technique is so important with strength training. And unfortunately in my practice, I see people who hurt themselves doing exercise. We really want people to do it right, but we have those strength training videos. We also have a stretching slideshow to show you how to do basic stretches.
Dr. Christina Chen: The resources are out there.
Dr. Edward Laskowski: The resources are out there. And again, it doesn’t have to take that much time. For those people who are thinking, “Oh, I don’t, I can’t,” really kind of finding ways to weave this into what you do and realizing, again, those minimal minutes we spent with the strength and stability, you’re brushing your teeth, you stand on one leg, you’re brushing your teeth anyway, you can combine it, just standing on one leg with some stability training.
Dr. Christina Chen: I love these ideas. I feel like the creativity of weaving into your day-to-day, is so much better than traveling to a fitness center three times a week. And eventually that becomes hard to do, but brushing your teeth and standing one leg, maybe doing some squats while you’re waiting for the water to boil, works easier.
Or for me, before I go up the stairs, if I’m in the basement working, I have to do 10 stair pushups. And before I couldn’t do a single push up, and about two years later, I can do more like with good form now. Yeah, those are great examples. It doesn’t have to take a lot of time. As far as the big picture of preventive health, how do you counsel people both young and old overall? It’s not just disease prevention, but what are some other overarching preventive health goals of exercise?
Dr. Edward Laskowski: That’s a great question. And that 150 minutes was, again, to give the maximal health benefit. The risk of cardiovascular disease, which is still our number one killer, the voluminous evidence to show that that amount of activity will prevent cardiovascular disease and cancer mitigation. Thirteen separate cancers are mitigated by physical activity, so virtually all aspects of our life.
We talked about the mental health aspect as well. Physical activity can mitigate the bad things that can happen to us in life, and we have, again, tons of research to document this. The problem now is we have, and you mentioned my two administrations and the president’s council I served on, our main message was getting the word out there that we have an epidemic of obesity and sedentary lifestyle in the United States, but also in the world.
And we’ve given lectures in Malta and China now. Over 25 percent of industrialized cities have obesity problems. It’s ubiquitous. And in America about 70 percent of Americans are overweight, obese, and have a sedentary lifestyle. And the ramifications of that, when you talk about prevention, when you’re obese you have higher risk of arthritis, you have higher risk of type 2 diabetes, you have higher risk of cardiovascular disease.
And again we have a lot of shiny things right now in regenerative medicine, but if your BMI is very high, we can squirt something in your knee and maybe that’ll help. Maybe it won’t, but the real issue is the BMI being high because that puts some tremendous amount of load on your joints.
One pound in the midsection translates almost to four pounds in the lower extremities, the hip and knees. Again, a little can go a long way and it doesn’t have to, you don’t have to lose tremendous amounts, but even 10 percent of your body weight can be very beneficial in helping joint health and preventing some of the mitigating arthritic risks and eliminating type two diabetes risk, high blood pressure risk, all these types of things.
It’s really, truly an epidemic. And when we have that amount of people, it’s scary too, and there was a great New England Journal of Medicine study where they found that if your BMI was over 30, you had a 200-400 percent greater mortality risk, not morbidity, but mortality. If it was 25-29, it was about a 20-40 percent higher mortality risk.
Those are scary numbers. If we had any pathogen that caused those numbers, we’d be running in the streets right now, but it’s that certain ethnic groups and races are affected certainly more. These are huge issues, and it doesn’t seem we’re going in the right direction still, despite all this education and information.
As you mentioned, I served under Presidents Bush and then Obama, and the data now is even worse than when I served under those administrations as far as the percent of Americans overweight, obese, and sedentary lifestyles. We have a lot of things. We have technology. COVID certainly didn’t help. Getting back to foundations, we need to get back to these basic things too, to turn our health around to prevent some of these things that can happen if we don’t do that.
Dr. Christina Chen: Excellent points. For my older adults in the community setting, my patients who have troubles exercising and staying physically active, one thing that really identifies with them is the notion of being able to stay independent and being functional because all these things that you’re mentioning is leading to a life of debility.
Which may translate to disability, it just takes one fall to break a major bone and then there goes your walking abilities. And so it’s all these things we’re trying to prevent in order to keep people as independent as possible in their homes.
Dr. Edward Laskowski: You’re exactly right. And the frailty index now is being talked about a lot, frailty, right? Again, voluminous studies show that if you have that combination of healthy diet, healthy activity, and optimal BMI, that that frailty index is going to be the lowest it can be and you’re going to be at the best risk profile for not having frailty. It’s these basic foundational things. There’s not a magic pill out there that you take and make it better.
It’s the basics. Again, we have a lot of shiny options in our culture, which is great, and we need to do the research and find out how to use these appropriately and find out the efficacy of these interventions. But there’s nothing that supplants the basics. And I tell my athletes that all the time. They’re looking for this magic pill.
They did the foundational things, the basics, really well. Michael Jordan, Kobe Bryant, the greats in baseball, the greats in football. There wasn’t anything magic they did. They just did all the right basic things.
Dr. Christina Chen: I love the tone of this conversation because I feel it’s very positive because when we talk about topics in aging, it’s always like, “Oh, it’s the bad stuff,” right? And how do we prevent this and how do we deal with it when it’s happening? But I love this topic because there’s so much we can do beforehand that can translate to positive outcomes and it’s just understanding the science and empowering ourselves as well as our patients and in families and caregivers as well. And so that’s the whole goal of this podcast is aging forward. We’re trying to help people live their best lives by understanding the science. The basic science behind that.
Dr. Edward Laskowski: And it’s never too late. People may have conditions like arthritis and we used to think that what are the conditions that exercise would be contraindicated in? There were not that many, but still people even thought, well, maybe inflammatory myopathies. Now we’re finding even in inflammatory myopathies that the right amount of exercise is beneficial concussion. And we all remember when concussions first got studied, “Oh, you go to bed for two weeks, don’t do anything.
Now we’ve found that wasn’t good. The brain needs blood flow to heal. Again, done in the right way. If you have a condition like arthritis and all, it’s great to talk to your health care professional and we can probably design an exercise program to mitigate the effects of your condition, whatever it may be.
I deal with physically disabled athletes and you wouldn’t believe who we have in the U.S. Olympic and Paralympic teams. The Paralympic team, we have skiers that ski on one leg, 83 miles an hour. We have paraplegic individuals who use a sit ski to ski. These are elite athletes. And again, Because of their condition, we can design programs for them to really mitigate the effects of their condition to the point that they get the fitness benefit.
Dr. Christina Chen: That’s amazing. You mentioned your patient earlier who was successfully able to lose over 200 pounds. Do you have any other success stories from your practice?
Dr. Edward Laskowski: One of my secretaries actually lost 140 pounds because she saw my slides and I was giving these lectures all the time and she started just doing the basic stuff. And the interesting thing is she’s in a cubicle with a bunch of other people and everybody around her now is “Oh, what are you eating today?” Or, “Oh, can I go for a walk with you?”
She’s a role model that influences those around her. I had many colleagues too, who thought it was too late, and I had a lunchtime talk with one of our administrators and I said, “No, it’s not. You can still make a difference here.” And she’s like, ”Really?” And it changed her life. She got her back into the activity. She loved horseback riding.
These little things, they really work. It’s not magic that works the next day, but if you do these things regularly, you’re going to reap magical benefits. It’s very satisfying to see how these individuals’ lives have really been changed by it.
Dr. Christina Chen: On that note, I want to show you something. I want to show you something that I’ve been hanging on to for a while. This is a picture of our Northwest Clinic office. Okay. I saw your lecture a while ago. I printed out that slide of that pill one. It’s sitting right there and it’s hanging next to a clock that every hour chimes a random animal sound.
And what it encourages us to do is our wellness challenge. Every hour they get up and we have to do one of these five things, either 10 sit ups, 10 crunches, 10 push ups, or running-in-place for 10 seconds.
And so that’s been our inspiration for the past couple of years. And it’s been inspired by you. And I wanted to share that with you because once this happens every hour you just see the entire room get up and we’re all just doing different things that are so cool. I just want to let you know you’ve been touching a lot of people from not just across the world, but within your own institution.
Dr. Edward Laskowski: I greatly appreciate that. But it’s you putting it into action. It’s just some of those little steps and what a creative, unique thing. And there’s a sense of community, like you say, where everybody’s doing it together at the same time.
Dr. Christina Chen: It’s fun.
Dr. Edward Laskowski: That’s just wonderful.
Dr. Christina Chen: When we don’t hear the animal, we’re like, “Oh, the clock’s probably broken.”
Dr. Edward Laskowski: Now I’m going to use you as an example. Any words of encouragement for people who are struggling to exercise? What are some ways we can help? Empower them. Again, it doesn’t have to be all at once. It can start slow. And it can include the things that we like to do.
We don’t need to force people to do something or, again, they have these visions of when they hear of an athlete and, even in sports medicine we used to say everybody, we want to improve your fitness no matter what, you don’t have to be a professional athlete to see us.
We want to make you better and make you perform better. The little steps go a long way, you don’t have to do those intense things. Again, I like the term physical activity rather than exercise because any movement matters. Movement is medicine. Motion is lotion. Anything is possible. Things will be helpful. And again, weaving ‘em into the day that you will see these benefits happen over time.
It’s nice to have somebody, like an accountability partner. Whether it’s a family member, your spouse, friends, whatever. ‘Cause we all get sick, we have busy schedules and that’s okay. Sometimes we don’t have that legalistic view of, “Oh, I have to do everything every day. It’s okay to miss a day. It’s okay to be sick and rest a while. That’s okay. And even in our athletes, we find that a period of even three weeks can maintain your fitness very well.
Three weeks of maybe not doing the things that they were doing before. It’s okay to have little lapses. The important thing is to get back on it and maintain it. Weave it into your life. It’s to the point you’re not even thinking about it. That’s where we want to get to the point where if we’re not doing it we say, “Hmm, I don’t feel as good. I didn’t get my walk today.” And that’s us. That’s our bodies prodding us, “Hey, you know, I need this.” It has become a natural habit.
Dr. Christina Chen: I love that. Great pearls. Well, last few minutes, we just want to get to know you, get to know the expert behind all this. What do you personally do to stay active? What’s your exercise go to?
Dr. Edward Laskowski: Again, a lot of the basics. I love to walk and I live in a hilly area, so I like to kind of walk up and down hills and it’s a great lower body glute exercise when you do that. And I’m from Chicago.
Walter Payton, one of the greatest halfbacks ever in the NFL, his main conditioning was he had a hill behind his home. He used to run up and down that hill. I kind of do that. I have free weights that I do at home.
Like you, Dr. Chen, we have very busy schedules. We have early morning meetings. We stay late at night. For me, it doesn’t work as well to go to a health club because then that would take up time.
If I can weave it into home, if I can go home and do my weight training, spend 20 minutes and do my free weights, do my body weight exercises, things like that, that works well for me. And again, the basic stuff, walking, I like to bike a lot, like to hike and do some climbing. Just those basic types of things.
Dr. Christina Chen: Weren’t you also a professional skier too, from what I recall?
Dr. Edward Laskowski: Well, it was many moons ago, but yeah, I was on the U.S. ski team when I was younger. I love to ski and do winter stuff too, and that’s a good point as well. And some of us who live in Northern climates, winter can be very demotivating and we may do great in the summer and all of a sudden winter comes and bam, “Oh boy, it really suffers.” I’d encourage those individuals who live in those areas to find something you like to do outside.
You have to get outside, even on some of those days when it’s 10 degrees, but the sun is out and the snow is glistening and all that. Just again, simple snow shoeing is fantastic exercise. And all you need is a good pair of nice warm boots and snow shoes.
Very inexpensive. You can rent them at a lot of facilities. But anything that gets you outside, is a good thing. Being in nature and just seeing the change of seasons, the different things we see in the winter, the different birds, all that is is very soul-soothing as well. Just having something you can do year round is important as well.
Dr. Christina Chen: The key point here is it doesn’t really matter what you do. Just do something. And just for my own curiosity, what was it like taking care of George W. Bush?
Dr. Edward Laskowski: George W. Bush had a little bit of arthritis in the knees, so he switched to mountain biking and biking. He scored in the top one half of 1 percent of his age group in the Cooper fitness test. He’s a very fit individual. In fact, after one of these meetings there’s always an opportunity tomorrow.
At one time that opportunity we went, it was a little secret service caravan to a secret service base in Virginia. And President Bush himself had hand cut a trail, a mountain bike trail. I rode a bike a lot, but I didn’t mountain bike that much. I was just having trouble hanging out. He was amazing. We’re going through the woods of Virginia on a single track thing. Like when I come home, I get branches hanging off of me.
I’m all dirty. What? Where were you? Wouldn’t believe it. And he was a great model of that. You may remember him. Uh, HW, his father skydived at around 85 or 90-years-old. He did a skydiving thing, a very fit individual as well. They were great role models for that. And really great proponents of activity.
President Obama as well. He loved basketball. Basketball is his thing, and he had a lot of success. Interventions in his life to improve his health, to stop some things that were bad habits. They were really motivated—again, this should be apolitical. It’s not whatever party you’re belonging to. This is just improving the health of a nation. Charlie and Will had it right. Making efforts as we can, even on a national level, to make an impact is going to be very important.
Dr. Christina Chen: Absolutely. Thank you for that endnote there. We just appreciate all you’ve done, all your work, sharing your story, sharing all the research that you’ve done to summarize in this podcast that I hope will touch a lot of lives out there and give them a different perspective on how we can, again, empower ourselves.
Dr. Edward Laskowski: My pleasure, Dr. Chen.
Dr. Christina Chen: That’s the goal of this podcast—to inspire all of us. Our patients, loved ones, and ourselves live our best lives by understanding the science and ways to empower our health. Thank you again for listening to “Aging Forward.” I hope you have all been enjoying the topics so far.
If you have any requests or topics you would like to hear about, please let us know. Like and follow us at the links below on Instagram and Twitter. Dr. Laskowski also has a social media account following, also linked below. We will see you for the next episode. Have a wonderful week.
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Man Overboard! is a fun-to-read handbook on men’s health is written by Craig L. Bowron, M.D. who uses his years of education and professional experience to help you get through this pilgrimage, this magical journey of aging-while-male, not unscathed but with a sense of control and dignity. You can get…
Fitness
Why telling people to exercise more rarely works – and the more effective alternative
The article below is an excerpt from my newsletter: Well Enough with Harry Bullmore. To get my latest thoughts on fitness and wellbeing pop your email address into the box above to get the newsletter direct to your inbox.
Exercise is good for you. Brilliant, in fact, by nearly every objective measure. For this reason, the world is full of fit people telling less fit people to do more exercise – but this rarely works. Why?
There’s a quote I love from my chat with experienced trainer, author and all-round sensible chap Ben Carpenter.
“Fitness professionals are hardcore exercise enthusiasts who often don’t know how to empathise with people who are not also hardcore exercise enthusiasts.”
This causes a massive divide between those who exercise and those who don’t.
Those who exercise regularly (group A) often built this habit as a child. Exercising regularly is their default, they are good at it, it feels fantastic, and (as with anyone who has ever hit a dopamine goldmine) they are keen to encourage others to do it too.
But for those who don’t exercise regularly (group B), it doesn’t feel good or natural at first – quite the opposite, actually. This is especially true when a member of group A recommends they start with a high-octane exercise class or hardcore workout programme.
No one is in the wrong – we are all just playing the cards we have been dealt. But there is a solution: start where you are, not where you want to be.
To do this, it is important to realise there is no one-size-fits-all fitness plan. The same workouts will affect people differently depending on individual factors such as genetics, environment and training experience.
This means, when a fitness figure or influencer tells you, “You can look like me by doing exactly as I do,” you would do well to question it.
Instead, it’s best to find a fitness routine that meets you where you’re at. (I think this plan from coach Darren Ellis offers a good framework for getting started, alongside a few options to scale it to your specific needs.)
If you currently don’t do any exercise, adding any new healthy behaviours into your regular daily routine will likely see an uptick in your fitness fortunes. For example, an extra portion of fruit and veg, a walk or a short mobility session.
If you’re a seasoned runner or gym-goer wanting further fitness progress, you need to upgrade the intensity of your existing workouts. For example, quickening your paces during interval sessions or adding a few extra kilos to the barbell for your next set of squats.
In both situations, picking appropriate workouts for you and progressing them in line with your fitness levels is the key to long-term success.
It’s also worth noting that exercise doesn’t always feel good at first, especially if you bite off more than you can chew.
I remember listening to elite coach Chris Hinshaw describe a running session he did with a former professional powerlifter who wanted to learn how to sprint. Powerlifters are juggernaut figures who excel at lifting heavy barbells, but they are often less adept at moving their own bodies.
So, Hinshaw gave his client a beginner sprinting drill he knew the athlete could excel at. “The first bite of the apple has to taste good,” Hinshaw later explained. Spurred on by his early success, the motivated athlete continued to work on his sprinting.
Perhaps hypocritically, given the intro, I am now going to tell you that exercise does ultimately end up feeling inexplicably good. My recent interview with 47-year-old Irishman David Keohan reinforced this belief.
“In my 20s I was into art and music and drinking and smoking,” he told me. “I was obese and unhealthy, mentally and physically. Then you get to your 30s and your body says, ‘Hold on a second, we need to start doing something about this, kid’.”
So, he went and bought a pair of trainers, fending off questioning glances from the man behind the till. Within six months he had run his first marathon. In the next few years he became a world champion at lifting kettlebells. Then, during Covid lockdowns, he started lifting huge boulders in his garden and stumbled across the lost Irish culture of stone lifting (this is one of my favourite recent interviews).
“I got bitten by the bug of feeling good,” Keohan continues. “Before, I never knew what feeling good felt like, if that makes any sense? But once you start to feel good, it’s amazing, and you realise how bad you felt for the last 10 years.”
Now, you don’t have to lift 170kg stones in your back garden to get in shape. This is an extreme example. But it does pay to do something slightly challenging (for you) on a fairly regular basis – whether that’s a short walk or a gnarly workout.
Because eventually, I’m afraid to say, exercise does have a tendency of making you feel rather good.
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Fitness
Best Peloton Alternatives for 2026
This is a tough question to answer because it depends on what kind of exercise bikes you’re into. But based on the popular exercise bikes and the bikes that resemble Peloton the most during testing, it would have to be NordicTrack, BowFlex and Echelon.
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You’ll want to consider cost, size, display screen and whether you want to pay for a monthly subscription. If your main goal is to simulate the experience of riding a Peloton, you’ll want to get a bike that offers similarities, like the NordicTrack S24.
“,”quickTake”:””,”canCollapse”:”true”,”collapseOnPageLoad”:”false”,”canTruncate”:”true”,”truncateOnPageLoad”:”false”},{“question”:”Which muscles does indoor cycling work?”,”answer”:”
Indoor cycling is a full-body workout. It targets your core, upper body, back, glutes, quadriceps, hamstrings and lower legs. Some bikes also include weights so you can more specifically target muscle groups in your arms.
“,”quickTake”:””,”canCollapse”:”true”,”collapseOnPageLoad”:”false”,”canTruncate”:”true”,”truncateOnPageLoad”:”false”},{“question”:”Is a built-in or BYO screen better?”,”answer”:”
The most eye-catching aspect of the Peloton exercise bike is its 21.5-inch HD touchscreen. For a Peloton alternative, you want the exercise bike to have a screen or tablet compatibility. Some exercise bikes like NordicTrack and Echelon come with the large touchscreens, but other brands like BowFlex require you to use a tablet to access classes. The smaller screen may not draw you in as much, but it’s a personal preference whether you want the touchscreen.
“,”quickTake”:””,”canCollapse”:”true”,”collapseOnPageLoad”:”false”,”canTruncate”:”true”,”truncateOnPageLoad”:”false”},{“question”:”Is a subscription necessary?”,”answer”:”
Peloton charges $44 a month for its All-Access membership. As you can tell by the Peloton alternatives list, other brands offer similar memberships through their app subscriptions. You can use any of these bikes independently, but if you want to get the most out of a bike, you may want to consider signing up for a membership as well. The other plus is most of these exercise bikes connect to third-party apps, so there are different ways to use them.
“,”quickTake”:””,”canCollapse”:”true”,”collapseOnPageLoad”:”false”,”canTruncate”:”true”,”truncateOnPageLoad”:”false”},{“question”:”What’s better, Echelon or Peloton? “,”answer”:”
This depends on the type of experience you’re looking for. An Echelon is a slightly more affordable option ($300 cheaper), and it’s easy to follow like a Peloton. But a Peloton has a rotating screen, and its instructors tend to be more high-energy than Echelon’s. If the classes matter the most to you, an Echelon membership is slightly cheaper than Peloton’s, so you may want to spend the extra money on the classes and bike if it’s in your budget.
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Fitness
‘I’m a neuroscientist – these are the 3 best workouts for slowing cognitive decline’
‘Exercise is usually viewed through the lens of physical appearance, the number on the scale and the size of your jeans,’ says Dr Ramon Velazquez, neuroscientist and scientific advisor at Mind Lab Pro. ‘But you cannot move your body without moving your brain. Exercise is not primarily a body intervention – it’s a brain intervention, and the changes you see in your waistline or muscles are side effects of what’s actually going on neurologically every time you move your body with intention.’
Indeed, while a huge body of research shows how crucial movement is for physical health – from protecting our hearts to reducing cancer risk – an increasing number of studies are highlighting the significant cognitive benefits of exercise, from boosting memory and reducing dementia risk to restoring neuroplasticity (the brain’s resilience in adapting to new information, behaviours and sensory input).
But what exactly should that look like in practice? And how should you structure your weekly routine to maximise the brain health benefits of exercise? Dr Velazquez has the answers below.
The workouts
Zone 2 cardio
‘Zone 2 cardio is the most underrated form of exercise. People usually dismiss it because they feel like they aren’t doing enough if they’re not drenched in sweat or gasping for air,’ says Dr Velazquez. ‘It’s a type of activity where you move at a pace that elevates your heart rate, but you can still have a conversation with the person next to you.’
Indeed, a recent review of more than 258,000 people found that even low- to moderate-intensity exercise performed for less than 30 minutes twice a week improved general cognition, memory and executive function (the mental processes involved in planning, focus and decision-making) in as little as one to three months. Dr Velazquez recommends light jogging, swimming and cycling. ‘From a neurological perspective, this type of exercise consistently increases blood flow to the brain over a prolonged period of time,’ he explains. ‘This is important because it helps deliver nutrients to the regions that are most vulnerable to ageing.’
Such exercise, adds Dr Velazquez, also supports the glymphatic system – the brain’s waste clearance system that removes proteins and cellular waste linked to neurodegenerative diseases such as Alzheimer’s.
Strength sessions
‘Strength training is also extremely important for longevity. Strong muscles produce and release hormones and signalling molecules that directly influence the brain,’ says Dr Velazquez. ‘Muscle mass starts declining from your mid-thirties via a process called sarcopenia, and as the muscle disappears, so does the neurological signalling it produces.’
Two to three weekly sessions is the minimum needed to make a difference, he adds. ‘The sessions don’t need to be long – 45 minutes of focused, compound movements is enough.’ Think: squats, deadlifts, rows and presses – ‘exercises that recruit large muscle groups and produce the strongest possible neurochemical response’.
VO2 max training
‘VO2 max – the maximum amount of oxygen your body can consume and use during intense exercise – is now one of the most powerful predictors of long-term survival ever identified in the research,’ says Dr Velazquez. ‘Most people assume that blood pressure and cholesterol are the numbers worth paying attention to when it comes to how long they are going to live, but VO2 max is more predictive than either of those – a low VO2 max is not just a fitness problem, it’s a mortality risk.’
To improve this metric, Dr Velazquez advises introducing high-intensity exercise – where you’re working at near-maximum capacity for short bursts – once or twice weekly, adding that ‘a simple and highly effective routine would be 4-6 intervals of one minute at hard effort followed by two minutes of recovery’.
‘It will be uncomfortable, but that’s the feeling you need to chase to make this exercise effective, and the physiological stress of those intervals drives adaptations that are cardiac, vascular and neurological.’
Example weekly workout routine
‘Zone 2 is the base of the pyramid, VO2 max training is the peak. You cannot build a high peak without a wide, solid base, which is why all three pillars work together,’ says Dr Velazquez, who gives an example of an effective weekly routine below.
Monday
30-45 mins strength, eg, squats, deadlifts, rows, presses.
Tuesday
Zone 2 workout, eg, light jog or swim.
‘The key is finding an enjoyable activity that raises your heart rate, but not to the point where you’re gasping for air.’
Wednesday
30-45 mins strength.
Thursday
Zone 2 workout.
Friday
30-45 mins strength + VO2 max training afterwards.
Saturday
Longer zone 2 workout (around 60 mins).
‘I would suggest working out in nature, since a natural environment and exercise are a perfect combination for lowering cortisol.’
Sunday
Rest day.
‘Rest is not the absence of progress, it’s a necessary part of keeping the progress going.’
‘The brain responds to every single session. It’s tracking the pattern, not the performance. And the earlier in life you establish that pattern, the more of your brain you get to keep.’
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Hannah Bradfield is a Senior Health and Fitness Writer for Women’s Health UK. An NCTJ-accredited journalist, Hannah graduated from Loughborough University with a BA in English and Sport Science and an MA in Media and Cultural Analysis. She has been covering sports, health and fitness for the last five years and has created content for outlets including BBC Sport, BBC Sounds, Runner’s World and Stylist. She especially enjoys interviewing those working within the community to improve access to sport, exercise and wellness. Hannah is a 2024 John Schofield Trust Fellow and was also named a 2022 Rising Star in Journalism by The Printing Charity. A keen runner, Hannah was firmly a sprinter growing up (also dabbling in long jump) but has since transitioned to longer-distance running. While 10K is her favoured race distance, she loves running or volunteering at parkrun every Saturday, followed, of course, by pastries. She’s always looking for fun new runs and races to do and brunch spots to try.
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