Get tips and insights from health-care professionals and people with diabetes, share your thoughts, and ask questions on our blog.

Go to Blog Archives

Sign up for our weekly e-mail newsletter and receive a FREE GIFT! Enter your e-mail below.



 

Learn more
Sample e-newsletter

Learn more about diabetes

Links to help you learn more about diabetes.

Ask a diabetes expert
Other diabetes resources
Browse article topics


Print |
Text Size:
A

A

A

David Spero, Registered Nurse
May 28, 2008

The New York Times Discovers Exercise

David Spero

The April 29 issue of The New York Times science section had a good article by Jane Brody on the benefits of exercise in chronic illness, "You Name It, Exercise Will Make It Better." It could have been stronger, but it does make the true point that physical activity is the single best health practice, no matter what your condition.

The good thing about writing for The Times is that you can call an expert anywhere in the world, and they'll answer you. In Brody's article, a Harvard epidemiologist named Frank Hu says that exercise "comes close to a magic bullet, in terms of its strong and universal benefits."

Marilyn Moffatt, a physical therapy professor at New York University, says "regular moderate exercise increases your ability to fight the effects of disease."

I won't quote any more for fear of copyright problems. But Dr. Moffatt reports that exercise helps people with heart failure, lowers high blood pressure, and improves peripheral circulation. It prevents strokes in people who have had "ministrokes" or transient ischemic attacks (TIAs), as they're called. It reduces pain and increases mobility in people with arthritis, Parkinson disease, and multiple sclerosis. It increases energy for everyone, even those with heart and lung disease.

We all know about the benefits for people with diabetes, especially Type 2. Exercise lowers insulin resistance more than any drug or combination of drugs.

Exercise and the Brain
Perhaps the most dramatic benefits of exercise are the way it often relieves depression. For many people, exercise lifts their mood, boosts their self-confidence, and makes them feel more confident about the future. (I coach some depressed people, and while some have found exercise a virtual cure for depression, others still need medicines and still have some really bad days. Exercising helps them but doesn't cure them. Psychotherapy is still a valuable treatment for them.) Exercise also helps people with high anxiety levels and is probably the best stress-reducer.

Why Isn't This Wonder Drug Prescribed?
So once again, I have to ask, why do we spend gazillion$ on drugs (actually, a bit over $200 billion) and virtually nothing (about $100 million nationwide) on promoting physical activity? Is it as simple as a health-care system doing what is easy and profitable instead of what works? Or is there more to it? Why have schools cut out physical education and, in many cases, even eliminated recess? Why do office buildings keep stairways locked, forcing people to take the elevators? Why are communities being built without sidewalks, so people can't walk safely?

We know that lack of exercise is a major contributor to Type 2 diabetes, heart disease, and most other chronic illness. We also know that physically active children learn better, behave better, and have better health. Why isn't exercise being vigorously promoted and enabled? Why is it being de-emphasized, and many cases prevented, in a society that spends $1.5 trillion per year treating chronic illness?

Our society denies people activities that would make them healthier and more confident. Why? I write a lot about these problems and what we can do about it in my book Diabetes: Sugar-coated Crisis. But what do you think about it?

Link for Good Science Writing
Jane Brody, who wrote this exercise article, is not one of my favorites. Her associate Natalie Angier writes the most entertaining, informative, and interesting science articles I have seen. It would be almost (but, in my opinion, not quite) worth subscribing to the NYT just for her. But you can see some of her work here.

POST A COMMENT        E-MAIL A FRIEND

I have asthma which is exacerbated by perfume or any strong scents (such as hairspray, deodorant, cleaning products) Since I can no longer go the the gym (I would have an asthma attack every time and I even tried several different times of the day) We used our stimulus check on a recumbent exercise bike. It has several programs on it or you can just ride. We have it in our living room so it stares us in the face. We have no excuse not to use it. It is so quiet that you can have the TV on and it does not have to be on full blast.

Posted by: Airborne Mom | Jun 04, 2008 04:56 PM

What a great use of your stimulus check! I still haven't decided what to do with mine. Maybe get a massage? Glad you're riding that bike.
David

Posted by: David Spero RN | Jun 10, 2008 03:19 AM

If you are seeing this, then you have style sheets turned off. Please ignore the first form (below). This form is hidden as a makeshift protection to stop spam-bots. They will see this form and post to it (doing nothing) and ignore the second (real) form.

Below is the real form. If you're posting comments, please use the below form. Thank you.


Username:

will be displayed

Email Address:

will not be displayed

Check this box to receive our FREE newsletter.


Comments

Bold | Italic | Quote | Paragraph | Link

Note: All comments are moderated and there may be a delay in the publication of your comment. Please be on-topic and appropriate. Do not disclose personal information. For more information, please read our Terms and Conditions.

Disclaimer of Medical Advice: You understand that the blog posts and comments to such blog posts (whether posted by us, our agents or bloggers, or by users) do not constitute medical advice or recommendation of any kind, and you should not rely on any information contained in such posts or comments to replace consultations with your qualified health care professionals to meet your individual needs. The opinions and other information contained in the blog posts and comments do not reflect the opinions or positions of the Site Proprietor.

Metformin

Do you take the oral diabetes drug metformin (brand names Glucophage, Glumetza, Fortamet, Riomet, and others)?

Click here to participate.

In the current Diabetes Self-Management July/August 2008 Issue Diabetes Self-Management July/August 2008 Issue

Type 2 Diabetes: Are We Closer to Knowing "Why?"

Learn the latest theories about what causes Type 2 diabetes.

Food Scoring For Better Nutrition

Scoring systems make it easier to choose nutritious foods at the grocery store.

Quiz: How Much Do You Know About Your Pancreas?

Test your knowledge about roles the pancreas plays in the body.

Complete table of contents
Get a FREE ISSUE
Subscription questions

DSM Answerbook, providing you with answers to your questions about diabetes

Appetizers & Snacks
Stuffed tomatillos
 
Fish & Shellfish
Simple grilled salmon
 
Salads & Dressings
Crunchy broccoli salad
 
Vegetables
Corny zucchini medley
 
Desserts
Blueberry bliss

More diabetes-friendly recipes