Beware the Stairmaster
by Gary Taubes
Let
us begin with a short quiz: a few questions to ponder during the
30 (or 60 or 90) minutes a day you spend burning off excess calories
at the gym, or perhaps while feeling guilty because youre
not so engaged. If lean people are more physically active than fat
people one fact in the often-murky science of weight control
thats been established beyond reasonable doubt does
that mean that working out will make a fat person lean? Does it
mean that sitting around will make a lean person fat? How about
a mathematical variation on these questions: Lets say we go
to the gym and burn off 3,500 calories every week thats
700 calories a session, five times a week. Since a pound of fat
is equivalent to 3,500 calories, does that mean well be a
pound slimmer for every week we exercise? And will we continue to
slim down at this pace for as long as we continue to exercise?
For most of
us, fear of flab is the reason we exercise, the motivation that
drives us to the gym. Its also why public-health authorities
have taken to encouraging ever more exercise as part of a healthy
lifestyle. If were fat or fatter than ideal, we work out.
Burn calories. Expend energy. Still fat? Burn more. The dietary
guidelines of the U.S. Department of Agriculture, for instance,
now recommend that we engage in up to 60 minutes daily of moderate
to vigorous intensity physical activity just to maintain weight that
is, keep us from fattening further. Considering the ubiquity of
the message, the hold it has on our lives, and the elegant simplicity
of the notion burn calories, lose weight wouldnt
it be nice to believe it were true? The catch is that science suggests
its not, and so the answer to all of the above quiz questions
is no.
Just last month,
the American Heart Association and the American College of Sports
Medicine published joint guidelines for physical activity and health.
They suggested that 30 minutes of moderate physical activity five
days a week is necessary to promote and maintain health.
What they didnt say, though, was that more physical activity
will lead us to lose weight. Indeed, the best they could say about
the relationship between fat and exercise was this: It is
reasonable to assume that persons with relatively high daily energy
expenditures would be less likely to gain weight over time, compared
with those who have low energy expenditures. So far, data to support
this hypothesis are not particularly compelling. In other
words, despite half a century of efforts to prove otherwise, scientists
still cant say that exercise will help keep off the pounds.
The 30 minutes
recommended by the AHA-ACSM report is a departure from the recent
guidelines of other authoritative organizations the Institute
of Medicine of the National Academies and the International Association
for the Study of Obesity both of which, like the USDA, have
recommended that we exercise for up to 60 minutes a day to avoid
what the USDA calls unhealthy weight gain. But the reason
for this 60-minute recommendation is precisely that so little evidence
exists to support the notion that exercising less has any effect.
The report
that these experts cite most often as grounds for their assessments
was published in 2000 by two Finnish researchers who surveyed all
the relevant research on exercise and weight of the previous twenty
years. Yet the Finnish report, the most scientifically rigorous
review of the evidence to date, can hardly be said to have cleared
up the matter. When the Finnish investigators looked at the results
of the dozen best-constructed experimental trials that addressed
weight maintenance that is, successful dieters who were trying
to keep off the pounds they had shed they found that everyone
regains weight. And depending on the type of trial, exercise would
either decrease the rate of that gain (by 3.2 ounces per month)
or increase its rate (by 1.8 ounces). As the Finns themselves concluded,
with characteristic understatement, the relationship between exercise
and weight is more complex than they might otherwise
have imagined.
This is not
to say that there arent excellent reasons to be physically
active, as these reports invariably point out. We might just enjoy
exercise. We may increase our overall fitness; we may live longer,
perhaps by reducing our risk of heart disease or diabetes; well
probably feel better about ourselves. (Of course, this may be purely
a cultural phenomenon. Its hard to imagine that the French,
for instance, would improve their self-esteem by spending more time
at the gym.) But theres no reason to think that we will lose
any significant amount of weight, and little reason to think we
will prevent ourselves from gaining it.
Read
the rest of the article
June
22, 2009
Copyright
© 2009 New York Magazine
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