By
JANE E. BRODY
Fact: Every hour
of every day, 330 Americans turn 60.
Fact: By 2030,
one in five Americans will be older than 65.
Fact: The
number of people over 100 doubles every decade.
Fact: As they
age, people lose muscle mass and strength, flexibility and bone.
Fact: The
resulting frailty leads to a loss of mobility and independence.
The last two
facts may sound discouraging. But they can be countered by another. Regular
participation in aerobics, strength training and balance and flexibility
exercises can delay and may even prevent a life-limiting loss of physical
abilities into one’s 90s and beyond.
This last fact
has given rise to a new group of professionals who specialize in what they call
“active aging” and an updated series of physical activity recommendations for older adults
from the American Heart Association and the American College of Sports
Medicine. These recommendations are expected to match new federal activity
guidelines due in October from the United States Health and Human Services Department.
But you need
not — indeed should not — wait for the government. Even if you have a chronic
health problem or physical limitation, there are safe ways to improve fitness
and well-being. Any delay can increase the risk of injury and make it harder to
recoup your losses.
Miriam E.
Nelson, director of the John Hancock Center for Physical Activity and Nutrition at Tufts
University in Boston and lead author of the new recommendations, observed last
fall in The Journal on Active Aging that “with every increasing decade of age,
people become less and less active.”
“But,” Dr.
Nelson said, “the evidence shows that with every increasing decade, exercise
becomes more important in terms of quality of life, independence and having a
full life. So as of now, Americans are not on the right path.”
Jim Concotelli
of the Horizon Bay Senior Communities in Tampa, who oversees fitness and
wellness program development for communities for the elderly in several states,
noted this year in The Journal on Active Aging that many older Americans were
unfamiliar with exercise activities and feared that they would cause injury and
pain, especially if they have arthritis or other chronic problems. Yet by
strengthening muscles, he said, they can improve joints and bones and function
with less pain and less risk of injury.
The key is
start slowly and build gradually as ability and strength improve. Most
important is simply to start — now— perhaps under the guidance of a fitness
professional or by creating a program based on the guidelines outlined here.
Although
medical clearance may not be necessary for everyone for the moderate level of
activity suggested, those with a known or possible problem would be wise to
consult a doctor. And a few sessions with a trainer can help assure that the
exercises are being done correctly and not likely to cause injury.
Until recently,
physical activity recommendations for all ages have emphasized aerobics, or
cardiovascular conditioning, through moderate to vigorous activities like brisk
walking, cycling, lap swimming or jogging for half an hour a day five or more
days a week. For those unable to do 30 minutes at a time, the activities can be
broken up into three 10-minute intervals a day. If you have long been
sedentary, start with even shorter intervals.
For people who
prefer indoor workouts, a treadmill, cross-trainer, step machine or exercise
bike can provide excellent aerobic training for the heart, lungs and circulation.
Those unable to do weight-bearing exercise might try swimming or water
aerobics. Keep in mind that 30 minutes a day of aerobic activity five days a
week is the minimum recommendation. More is better and can reduce the risk of
chronic disease related to inactivity.
Contrary to
what many active adults seem to believe, physical fitness does not end with
aerobics. Strength training has long been advocated by the National Institute
on Aging, and the heart association has finally recognized the added value of
muscle strength to reduce stress on joints, bones and soft tissues; enhance
stability and reduce the risk of falls; and increase the ability to meet the
demands of daily life, like rising from a chair, climbing stairs and opening
jars.
Strength training
can be done in a gym on a series of machines, each working a different set of
major muscle groups: hips, legs, chest, back, shoulders, arms and abdomen. Or
it can be done at home with resistance bands or tubes, hand-held barbells or
dumbbells or even body weight. One program, the Key 3 program diagrammed here,
was devised by Michael J. Hewitt, research director for exercise science at the
Canyon Ranch Health Resort in Tucson. It can be completed in 10 minutes with
practice.
As Dr. Hewitt
explained in the International Longevity Center-USA newsletter, skeletal
muscles can only contract and thus are always arranged in pairs. “One muscle of
the pair pulls to bend the joint (flexion), and its antagonist pulls to
straighten the joint (extension).” Thus, a strengthening program must be
balanced, he said, “pairing every pulling lift with an opposite pushing
action.”
Dr. Hewitt
emphasized that to reduce the risk of injury and premature muscle fatigue, the
large muscles should be exercised first, followed by the smaller muscles, with
the postural muscles exercised last. For example, one would start with chest
and upper back muscles, then the arms and shoulders and finally the lower back
and abdomen.
Muscles have to
be overworked to grow stronger. The goal for each exercise is three sets of 8
to 12 repetitions to muscle fatigue. Muscles also need time to recover. So
strength training should be done two or three times a week on nonconsecutive
days.
The new
recommendations add flexibility and balance to the mix. Improving balance and
reducing the risk of falls is critical as you age — if you fall, break your hip
and die of pneumonia, aerobic capacity will not save you. Ten minutes a
day stretching legs, arms, shoulders, hips and trunk can help assure continued
mobility, and daily exercises like standing on one foot and then the other,
walking heel to toe or practicing tai chi can improve balance.
The
recommendations, issued last August, are geared to healthy adults 18 to 64,
with a companion set for those 65 and older or those 50 to 64 who have chronic
health problems or physical limitations. Details can be found at www.acsm.org. Under “Influence,” click on Physical Activity
Guidelines From ACSM and AHA.
The experts who made these
recommendations urge all adults to adopt them now. As C. Jessie Jones,
co-director of the Center for Successful Aging at California State University, Fullerton, said, “People can’t wait until they’re
in residential or long-term care to get started.”