A woman exercises in a gym in central London. (AP
Photo/Sang Tan)
People who complain they have no time to exercise may
soon need another excuse.
Some experts say intense exercise sessions could help people
squeeze an entire week's workout into less than an hour.
Those regimens - also called interval training - were
originally developed for Olympic athletes and thought to be
too strenuous for normal people.
But in recent years, studies in older people and those with
health problems suggest many more people might be able to
handle it. If true, that could revolutionise how officials
advise people to exercise - and save millions of people hours
in the gym every week. It is also a smarter way to exercise,
experts say.
"High-intensity interval training is twice as effective as
normal exercise," said Jan Helgerud, an exercise expert at
the Norwegian University of Science and Technology. "This is
like finding a new pill that works twice as well ... we
should immediately throw out the old way of exercising."
Studies on intense training have been published in sports
medicine journals and have largely been based on young,
healthy people. Experts say more studies are needed on how
older and less fit populations handle this type of exercise
before it can be recommended more widely.
Intense interval training means working very hard for a few
minutes, with rest periods between sets. Experts have mostly
tested people running or biking, but other sports like rowing
or swimming should also work.
Helgerud recommends people try four sessions lasting four
minutes each, with three minutes of recovery time in between.
Unless you're an elite athlete, it shouldn't be an all-out
effort.
"You should be a little out of breath, but you shouldn't have
the obvious feeling of exhaustion," Helgerud said.
In Britain and the US, officials recommend that people get
about 2 1/2 hours each week of moderate exercise. Those
guidelines target a mostly sedentary population and are
intended to help with weight control and heart health, not
boosting fitness levels, increasing strength or endurance.
Some experts have cautioned that ordinary people shouldn't
substitute their regular exercise routine for intense
training.
"There isn't enough evidence to say people should do one or
the other," said Gary O'Donovan, a sports and exercise expert
at the University of Exeter. "Any bout of exercise has the
potential to improve your blood pressure or lower your
cholesterol, and it doesn't necessarily have to be intense."
Still, O'Donovan said there was a dose-response relationship
between intensity and exercise and more intense exercise
would probably produce better benefits.
Helgerud says the time people spend in the gym could be
slashed dramatically if they did interval training instead.
He said officials have been too afraid of recommending
intense training for fear it would be too much for some
people.
"I'm much more afraid of people not exercising at all," he
said. "Inactivity is what's killing us."
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