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Queen’s fitness study recruiting volunteers for 32-week program

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Queen’s fitness study recruiting volunteers for 32-week program

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A long-term fitness study at Queen’s University that is exploring the effects of exercise is once again in recruiting mode.

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“The basis of this is one size doesn’t fit all and what size fits you as an individual,” said Bernadette Garrah, project co-ordinator of the Revise Research Study with the Lifestyle and Cardiometaboic research unit at Queen’s.

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“We’re really trying to link that to exercise as well, to be the most inclusive and to be the most supportive of finding essentially what works for all individuals for exercise,” Garrah added.

The 32-week exercise study, which is examining the effects of different levels of exercise on fitness and body composition, started in September 2022 and is currently seeking members of the community between the ages of 25 and 65, who are currently not physically active. Those selected will be subject to a series of assessments at no cost, and based on the results will receive an individualized exercise prescription, where participants will come for supervised exercise at the facility.

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“Following the Canadian guidelines (of a recommended) 115 minutes of exercise a week, about 30 minutes a day, a brisk walk, that’s what our participants will do here,” Garrah said. “Thirty minutes of walking a day is kind of where this started.”

The process, Garrah said, starts with a recruitment meeting, where participants will hear from Dr. Robert Ross, who is heading the study.

“They’ll listen to Dr. Ross, the (principle investigator) on this study, basically talk about what’s going on and if they decide to sign up, then we get them enrolled right away. It starts with assessments. Once they’ve done the baseline assessments, we’ll randomize them and they’re either going to be put into the control group or the exercise group,” Garrah explained.

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“From the time that you start until the time that you’re done, it’s about eight months, 32 weeks-ish, give or take,” Garrah said. “Once you start, if you are part of the control group, it’s just as good as the exercise group, the only thing is you don’t start exercising right away. It’s essentially a placebo. That’s what it is in research. We need to have this group; it’s very important. Members of that group will do all the same assessments that exercisers do, they’re simply waiting until the 16-week mark comes around to start their exercise.”

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Susan Foley, who recently finished her eight months as part of the low-amount, low-intensity exercise group, praised the study and the folks behind it.

“I learned about it from Facebook,” Foley said. “I was 63, I had had a heart attack in the past and my risk factors were sedentary lifestyle. So when I saw this study and it talked about exercising, it seemed to be everything that I needed to get exercise in my life.”

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Foley, who said she had participated in a program for heart attack survivors in the past but found that it was short term with participants asked to continue to exercise at home, which didn’t work for her. That, she said, and the one-size-fits-all regimen proved to be too onerous for her and too demanding on her knees and joints.

The Queen’s study, Foley said, came along at a time when she found herself soul-searching following the loss of her son.

“I started in around September,” she said. “I had lost my son in the summer and I thought, ‘I need to be doing something for myself and get exercise in my life, get healthier.’ My heart attack was in 2017 and I still hadn’t gotten into regular exercise. That’s what brought me in here.”

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Foley, feeling better than she says she has in a long time, almost wasn’t a participant in the program, she said. Before coming to orientation, she’d accepted a new job after having been previously retired. The day she attended orientation, she’d all but convinced herself she didn’t have the time to participate in an eight-month study, she said.

“I was thinking, ‘I can’t do this, I can’t commit to this, it’s going to take up too much time,’ even though I wanted to,” Foley said. “But when I heard Dr. Ross, the things that I was worried about and the things that I wanted for my health were all addressed. It is very individualized. They took into consideration my health past, my heart attack, also at my age. I was worried about bone density. I also was already having trouble at my age with balance, ankles and trouble going up and down stairs, pain in my knees. Plus, having had the heart attack, I have never yet been able to do a consistent exercise program. This study kind of was offering everything that I felt I needed to change.”

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Garrah said that while 32 weeks can seem like a huge commitment, the ask isn’t as overwhelming as the time frame might suggest.

“People say, ‘Oh, I have to do this for 32 weeks,’ but it’s 30 minutes of walking a day,” she said. “And we hope that you can do this for the rest of your life. If you do do this study, you’re doing this for eight months. Susan comes from Sydenham, parks, walks up to the fifth floor, is here for half an hour to an hour, depending on her exercise prescription, for eight months.”

For those who work out of town or may have other travel commitments they fear may hamper their ability to participate, the program loans Fitbit devices that participants can wear to continue to have their progress tracked and to stay on track while away.

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“We see in real time essentially when they log in for an exercise session, that can be just walking around the block, maintaining their prescription, the heart rate and the time and we gather data that way,” Garrah said.

For Foley, the results have been life-changing.

“(Susan’s) fitness improved 23 per cent,” Garrah said. “She went up a whole category in fitness for her age. Her blood pressure over time improved, her waist circumference lowered, her weight lowered. Susan showed a great result from being in this study.”

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Foley is now looking for ways to stay involved with the program because of its life-altering effects.

“What a difference it has made to my health,” she said. “I’ve never been a person who’d exercised ever in my life, and I always knew that it was something that I needed to do. So doing this for the eight months, and I’ll tell you, there were things that happened … losing my son, the side benefit was that I didn’t have the depression. I’m sleeping better. These results and the improvement that I’ve made, it’s just amazing to me that I got so much benefit from doing this program in terms of building muscle, my balance, my heart health, all of the things that I was hoping to get and building exercise into my life and to see the results of doing regular exercise.

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Participation in the study is completely free once selected.

“There is no cost associated at all,” Garrah added.

Garrah also noted that the study focuses solely on health effects of introducing exercise to an otherwise sedentary lifestyle and doesn’t require participants to modify their diets.

“We’re tracking your diet simply to make sure that you’re not upping your caloric intake, or decreasing it,” she said. “There are some people who start and they’re like, ‘Wow, I feel really great, I’m going to lower my caloric intake and try to really lose weight.’ We don’t want you to do that. Any weight loss associated with the study is strictly related to the exercise that you’re doing here.”

To date, Garrah said, 113 participants have completed the study, with the hope being to raise that number to 250 over the next few years. Recruitment is happening now with the goal of adding 40 volunteers to the study before recruiting again in the fall, she added.

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To qualify, you must be between the ages of 25 and 65, have a body mass index of 20 to 40, be weight stable, a non-smoker and non-diabetic, Garrah said. Those who qualify after orientation will undergo all of their assessments on site except for a bone density test, which will be done at Hotel Dieu Hospital.

“Everything assessment-wise and exercise-wise is done here,” Garrah said.

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The study’s data will serve two purposes, Dr. Ross said.

“One, that the results will be worth, as we think they will, for publication in a major medical/clinical type journal so the scientific community can see our findings and can say, ‘Boy, that’s great. Where do we go from here? This is very good,’” Ross said. “This extends knowledge. This tells us that it’s a major first step in saying that, as I like to say, maybe there’s not one size that fits all, but everybody has a size.”

And then there is the hope that the work influences public health measures, Ross said.

“There are multiple ways to achieve a benefit,” he said. “We need to tell the scientific community on one end. We also generate guidelines. We do things like that. We take that and we translate that information in a way that the general public will understand it and maybe will help people adopt, sustain and engage in physical activity.”

Interested participants can reach out to Garrah at b.garrah@queensu.ca to inquire.

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Fitness

A few extra minutes of exercise and sleep may help you live a year longer

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A few extra minutes of exercise and sleep may help you live a year longer

Adding just a few minutes of exercise per day could impact a person’s life expectancy, a new study has found.

Combined with an extra 24 minutes of sleep and small improvements to diet quality, those daily changes could add up to several additional years of life. 

The research is one of two studies published this week that examine how small adjustments to day-to-day movement, sleep and diet are associated with substantial health improvements.

Sleep, physical activity and diet study

The study, published in eClinicalMedicine, followed up a group of people eight years after they signed up for UK Biobank, a massive project that collected data on demographics, health and lifestyle in the early 2000s.

The team of researchers, led by Nicholas Koemel of the University of Sydney, fitted 59,078 people with trackers to monitor their exercise and sleep patterns for a week.

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They also rated the participants’ self-reported diet at the time they signed up for UK Biobank to come up with a score out of 100.

According to the researchers, the study is the first of its kind to investigate the minimum combined doses of device-measured sleep and physical activity, alongside a comprehensive dietary score. 

“We were aiming to look at the interconnection between sleep, physical activity, and diet; and our lifespan — which is the number of years that we live — and our healthspan, that’s essentially the number of years we live free from chronic disease,” Dr Koemel said.

The research found that small improvements in all three areas made gains in both lifespan and healthspan.

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The study found that improvement of life expectancy by one year when participants added:

  • just five extra minutes of sleep per day,  plus
  • just under two minutes per day of moderate-to-vigorous physical activity, and 
  • an extra half serving of vegetables.

“One of the core findings from our study was that realistic improvements, these modest tiny tweaks across multiple behaviours, the sleep, physical activity, and diet, were able to create meaningful improvements in our lifespan and healthspan,” Dr Koemel said. 

While these baby steps could help, overall the  study found that the “optimal combination” of the three categories correlated with an additional nine years of life expectancy was:

  • seven to eight hours of sleep, 
  • just over 40 minutes of moderate exercise per day, 
  • and a healthy diet.

Moira Junge, an adjunct clinical professor and health psychologist at Monash University, praised the studies and said looking at the combination of sleep, exercise and diet over the long term is crucial in longevity research.

“We absolutely need to put it together, and research like this is proof that even small changes can make a really big difference to your health and wellbeing,” Dr Junge said.

Cutting sitting by half hour helps with life expectancy

The second study, published in The Lancet, examined participants who had low activity levels and spent hours sitting throughout the day. 

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Data from more than 135,000 adults across Norway, Sweden and the United States, combined with data from the UK Biobank examined the impact of daily physical activity and reductions in sedentary behaviours on mortality. 

The researchers found a nine per cent reduction in mortality risk when those sitting for eight or more hours a day reduced their sitting time by 30 minutes. 

Studies have linked long periods of sitting with increased risk of several chronic health conditions including cardiovascular disease, diabetes and some types of cancer.  (ABC News: Danielle Bonica)

Sedentary behaviour has previously been linked to higher rates of chronic health conditions, such as diabetes, colon cancer and cardiovascular diseases, prompting some claims that “sitting is the new smoking”.

The study also found that increasing physical activity by just five minutes a day could have a significant health impact, especially for minimally active people. 

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Increasing from one minute to six minutes of exercise per day was associated with an approximately 30 per cent reduction in mortality risk. Those who increased activity from one minute to 11 minutes per day saw an approximate 42 per cent reduction in mortality risk.

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In 2022, a reported four in 10 Australian adults (aged 18–64) were insufficiently physically active: not meeting the recommended 150–300 minutes of moderate to vigorous activity across five or more days per week. 

“In reality, there’s always going to be people who don’t meet the guidelines,” said Melody Ding, a professor of public health at University of Sydney who co-led the study.

But what we know is that especially for those who are extremely inactive, for them to get to do a little bit more, that’s where we get the most bang for their buck.

“It tells us in terms of the benefits of physical activity, that we don’t need to get everybody to do so much. This micro-dosing concept, especially for those who are inactive, could make a huge difference in terms of health outcomes,” she said.

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Something better than nothing

Dr Junge hoped the study findings could help people feel positive health outcomes are achievable. 

“I think that when people can feel like they’ve got mastery over something then they’re more likely to change their behaviour and more likely to have motivation to change. Health is a confidence game,” she said. 

Lauren Ball, a professor of community health and wellbeing at University of Queensland, said the two new studies reconfirm the importance of diet, physical activity and sleep for overall health and wellbeing. 

“The notion that modest increases in physical activity is beneficial is also supported by other studies, suggesting that doing something is always better than nothing,” she said. 

“The results also support behaviour change theories that suggest that improving one aspect of health behaviour, such as eating well, may increase motivation or self-efficacy for other health behaviours, such as being physically active. 

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This is an uplifting reminder for us all about the value of these health behaviours.

‘Not a silver bullet’

While these numbers might be inspiring for some, Dr Koemel said they were not a “silver bullet”.

“It’s something that’s easy to accidentally take away from this; that maybe we only need to do one minute of exercise, and that’s not the case,” he said. 

“We still have physical guidelines, and those are there for a reason. This is really about helping us go that extra step, and ask what we would need to do to take the first step in the right direction.” 

The studies found that mortality improvements were most significant in participants who were inactive.

But Dr Ding said there was a “saturation point”.

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“For example, in this study our data has shown that for those who are already doing 30 or 40 minutes per day; the active people who are meeting the guidelines, adding another five minutes, you don’t really see visible change.”

Despite this, Dr Koemel said looking at small daily changes across sedentary behaviours, sleep, diet and physical activity could have positive impacts more widely.

“We want to try to create opportunities where everybody can make change. The idea that we need to make these massive overhauls; wake up and and run a marathon or go to the gym every day of the week, that might not necessarily be the best starting place,” he said.

This gives that open door for us to go through and say, ‘Well, look, if we won’t be able to make massive changes or consume a perfect diet in the ideal world, here’s a starting place for everybody to put the best foot forward.’

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Trending Exercise & Fitness Gear for the new year…

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Trending Exercise & Fitness Gear for the new year…
“Exercising” topped the list of resolutions for 2026, followed by “eating better” and “saving money.” Beauty and Style Editor, Marianne Mychaskiw, joins California Live with trending exercise products that will help you keep your fitness resolution… Or motivate you to get started.
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You can now exercise with Dunkin’ weighted fitness bangles

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You can now exercise with Dunkin’ weighted fitness bangles

Dunkin’ has released a limited-edition set of weighted bangles on Tuesday, Jan. 12 through a collaboration with fitness accessory brand Bala, coinciding with the nationwide launch of its new Protein Milk option.

The 2-pound weighted bangles are available exclusively at ShopBala.com/dunkin-bala-bangles for $65 while supplies last. The wearable weights, which can be worn on arms or legs, feature Dunkin’s signature pink-and-orange color scheme and add resistance to walks, stretches, and everyday movement.

The bangles coordinate with Dunkin’s existing Dunk N’ Pump Collection.

Alongside the fitness accessory launch, Dunkin’ introduced Protein Milk as a new beverage addition available at locations nationwide. Customers can add 15 grams of protein to any medium drink that includes a milk or non-dairy base.

The coffee chain rolled out several protein-focused beverages featuring the new Protein Milk, including Megan’s Mango and Strawberry Protein Refreshers, a Caramel Chocolate Iced Protein Latte, and an Almond Iced Protein Matcha Latte.

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