Close X
Tuesday, November 26, 2024
ADVT 
Health

Follow Spouse To Enhance Your Fitness Levels

Darpan News Desk IANS, 08 Apr, 2015 03:53 PM
    Do not look for a personal trainer, state-of-the-art gym or weight-loss treatment if you want to shed those extra kilos around your belly. Just follow the footsteps of your exercise-loving partner and enhance your fitness levels!
     
    According to lead investigator Laura Cobb from the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health and co-author Silvia Koton from the Tel Aviv University's Sackler Faculty of Medicine, if one spouse improves his or her exercise regimen, the other spouse is much more likely to follow suit.
     
    "The study tells that spouses can have a positive impact on one another in terms of staying fit and healthy over time," Koton said.
     
    For the study, they examined records from the Atherosclerosis Risk in Communities (ARIC) Study, which in 1987 began following a group of 15,792 middle-aged adults from communities in Maryland, North Carolina, Minnesota and Mississippi.
     
    Koton and her colleagues analysed data from two medical visits conducted roughly six years apart. At each visit, the researchers asked 3,261 spouse pairs about their physical activity levels.
     
    Six years later, they found that when a wife met recommended levels of exercise at the first visit, her husband was 70 percent more likely to meet those levels at subsequent visits than those whose wives were less physically active.
     
    Likewise, when a husband met recommended exercise levels, his wife was 40 percent more likely to meet the levels at follow-up visits.
     
    "Our findings suggest that physical activity promotion efforts should consider targeting couples," Koton noted.
     
    The findings were recently shared at the American Heart Association's "EPI/Lifestyle 2015 Scientific Sessions" in Baltimore.

    MORE Health ARTICLES

    Cow's milk can deliver AIDS drug to infants

    Cow's milk can deliver AIDS drug to infants
    A milk powder containing anti-retroviral drugs, which are not very soluble in water, can help better treat and prevent HIV infection in babies, research shows....

    Cow's milk can deliver AIDS drug to infants

    Veterinarians' Group Issues Advice On Quarantine And Handling Pets That May Catch Ebola

    Veterinarians' Group Issues Advice On Quarantine And Handling Pets That May Catch Ebola
    NEW YORK — A veterinarians' group has put out guidance on handling pets that may have been infected by Ebola. It says that if an animal tests positive, it should be euthanized.

    Veterinarians' Group Issues Advice On Quarantine And Handling Pets That May Catch Ebola

    Anxiety ups Alzheimer's risk

    Anxiety ups Alzheimer's risk
    Anxiety in people with memory problems could increase their risk of contracting Alzheimer's disease later in life, says a new research....

    Anxiety ups Alzheimer's risk

    Blood vessel protein could help treat prostate tumours: Study

    Blood vessel protein could help treat prostate tumours: Study
    A signal protein, that plays a crucial role in controlling the growth of blood vessels, could be used to suppress tumours in prostate cancer, according to....

    Blood vessel protein could help treat prostate tumours: Study

    Never-before-seen human genome variations uncovered

    Never-before-seen human genome variations uncovered
    Using a new genome sequencing technology, researchers have uncovered thousands of never-before-seen genetic variants in the human genome....

    Never-before-seen human genome variations uncovered

    First step in origin of pancreatic cancer identified

    The scientists have described the molecular steps necessary for acinar cells in the pancreas - the cells that release digestive enzymes - to become....

    First step in origin of pancreatic cancer identified