| More
Home / Big Fat Lies / Headlines


January 22, 2009
printable version email to a friend join our e-mail list


Sitting Disease: Obesity’s True Culprit

Sitting Disease: Obesity’s True Culprit

A Mayo Clinic researcher has identified exactly what is causing people to gain so much weight, even though our eating habits haven’t changed a lick in decades. So what’s behind our expanding waistlines? It’s called “sitting disease” – and it’s entirely preventable.

As we explored in our book Small Choices, Big Bodies, the most drastic change in the American caloric equation has been on the side of physical activity. As a society, we’re eating the same stuff but moving a lot less. The remote control, the car wash, the dishwasher all those modern conveniences mean we burn fewer calories per day than our grandparents did. And that imbalance has translated into excess poundage around the middle.

As Dr. James Levine of the Mayo Clinic told USA Today this morning, the problem comes down to a decline in “non-exercise activity thermogenesis,” or NEAT. Non-exercise activities include household chores like folding laundry or mowing the lawn, and simple substitutions such as taking the stairs instead of the elevator. None of those activities requires a gym membership, but all of them burn calories. And if we fail to do them, says Levine, we’re being robbed of the chance to burn an extra 1,500 to 2,400 calories per day.

So how can we take advantage of this form of exercise? Levine advises:

Simple examples include a quick walk around the block before your morning shower; a 30-minute walk at lunch; having a couple of walk-and-talk meetings during the day (research shows you'll think better); pacing when you're talking on the phone; taking a 15-minute catch-up walk after work with your partner; walking with your children and listening to their music with them; doing some active volunteering such as taking a stressed mom's children out for a walk or bringing a meal to an elderly person.

Simple, right? And isn’t that far more pleasurable than avoiding whatever foods the meal police have vilified this week? 

email us comments




printable version email to a friend join our e-mail list

Daily Headlines

  • Hype Masters Call Out Corn Syrup Falsehoods
    Posted On: Thursday 3/11/2010
  • BMI Surveillance: Another Flabby Idea
    Posted On: Thursday 3/4/2010
  • The Golden State Soda Tax
    Posted On: Friday 2/19/2010
  • The Latest Roundup on Roundness
    Posted On: Tuesday 1/12/2010
  • Addicted to Blame
    Posted On: Friday 1/8/2010
  • Back to Make-Believe with Dr. Oz
    Posted On: Wednesday 1/6/2010
  • Fructose Facts Finally Found?
    Posted On: Friday 12/18/2009
  • Grinching Our Diets
    Posted On: Thursday 12/17/2009


  • Activist Cash

    Center for Science in the Public Interest
    Background | Quotes | Financials
    The Center for Science in the Public Interest (CSPI) is the undisputed leader among America’s “food police.” CSPI’s joyless eating club has issued hundreds of high-profile — and highly questionable — reports condemning soft drinks, fat substitutes, irradiated meat, biotech food crops, French fries, and just about anything that tastes good. read more here »

    OpEds

    Eat well, but don't skip your exercise
    Unsuccessful dieters and overzealous policymakers might consider that they might have been focusing on the wrong side of the weight-loss equation. read more here »

    Lack of exercise is the problem
    State-by-state obesity trends make more sense when you look at the other side of the obesity equation — physical activity. Simply put, residents of states with high obesity rates tend to move less. read more here »


    Copyright © 1997-2010 Center for Consumer Freedom. Tel: 202-463-7112.