By Jesse Singal
If you pluck someone off the street, whether
in New York or Wichita or Seattle or Sacramento, and ask them how many steps
people should aim for per day in order to get enough physical activity, they'll
probably tell you 10,000. In an age in which pedometers are cheaper, more
accurate, and more feature-rich than ever, this number has taken on almost
mythical proportions -- a lofty-sounding goal (in reality, it's approximately
five miles, and a reasonably active person can pull it off fairly easily) that
separates the active-lifestyle haves from the slothful have-nots.
But is there any medical reason to embrace
this number? Not really. That's because the 10,000-steps-a-day recommendation
has nothing to do with sedentary, fast-food-drenched circa-2015 America.
Rather, the recommendation first popped up in a very different food and
environment: 1960s Japan.
"It basically started around the Tokyo
Olympics" in 1964, said Catrine Tudor-Locke, a professor who studies
walking behavior at LSU's Pennington Biomedical Center. "A company over
there created a man-po-kei, a pedometer. And man stands for '10,000,' po stands
for 'step,' and kei stands for 'meter' or 'gauge.'" Ten thousand, it turns
out, "is a very auspicious number" in Japanese culture, said Theodore
Bestor, a Harvard researcher of Japanese society and culture, in an email.
"That is, it seems likely to me that the 10,000 steps goal was subsidiary
to having a good-sounding name for marketing purposes." Whatever the
reason for the adoption of this particular number, "It resonated with
people at the time, and they went man-po-kei-ing all over the place," said
Tudor-Locke.
The problem, which barely needs stating, is
that circa-1964 Japan was markedly different from the circa-2015 U.S. "By
all accounts, life in Japan in the 1960s was less calorie rich, less animal
fat, and much less bound up in cars," said Bestor. Data from the Food and
Agriculture Organization of the United Nations shows that the average
per-capita food supply for Japanese people in 1964 was 2,632 calories, while
the average for Americans in 2011 was 3,639. That's a difference of about 1,000
calories -- or, if you're keeping track, about 20,000 steps for an average-size
person. (Jean Buzby of the USDA said in an email that food supply is a commonly
used rough proxy for food consumption.)
These sorts of numbers all vary hugely, of
course, depending on region, social demographics, and a variety of other
factors. But the point is no one can argue that Japanese people in the 1960s
lived in the same sort of nutritional environment as Americans in 2015.
More broadly, 10,000 steps is just a bit too
simplistic a figure, say nutrition researchers. All the ones I spoke to agreed
that there's nothing wrong with shooting for 10,000 steps, per se, and that on
paper, walking (or doing any physical activity) more is better than walking
less. But Tudor-Locke said that, "The one-size-fits-all [approach] doesn't
necessarily work."
Her work focuses on the most sedentary slice
of the population (a rather big slice slice in the U.S.), and there, it can be
a challenge to get people to take 5,000 steps, let alone 10,000. But moving
from 2,500 steps a day, say, to 5,000, is a small but important victory for
people who don't get any exercise, and can have important health ramifications.
"We know that you get the biggest bang for your buck by just moving from a
sedentary state up a little bit," she said. "Your biggest bang comes
from rolling off the couch and being active." A big European study
published in January that looked at the mortality rates for people with
different activities levels, in fact, found that "a markedly reduced
hazard was observed between those categorized as inactive and those categorized
as moderately inactive" -- a 20 to 30 percent reduction.
People in these categories, who at the
moment are getting almost no exercise, aren't going to benefit from the 10,000
steps recommendation. In fact, it might deter them from exercising, said
Tudor-Locke. "For people who are very inactive or chronically ill or whatever
have you, that might be a huge jump for them," she said, "and that
might be intimidating for them." If the 10,000 steps goal has this effect,
"then it loses its purpose." From a public-health perspective, she
said, a more pressing, realistic goal is "to get people away from taking
less than 5,000" steps a day.
In a country where people eat really, really
poorly, there's also a chance that fixating on the 10,000-step milestone will
lead people to neglect other, potentially important factors like their diet.
"Focusing exclusively on how many steps you're getting and neglecting
those other aspects isn't going to lead to an overall improvement in health,
unless you're addressing those other factors simultaneously," said Jeff
Goldsmith, a biostatistics professor at Columbia's Mailman School of Public
Health.
In other words: Yeah, 10,000 steps is great,
but if you follow up those 10,000 steps by buying a 500-calorie hamburger --
and, more generally, spend the rest of your day eating junk -- you can still
gain weight and face all sorts of unpleasant negative health outcomes.
"What we know from the scientific evidence is that diet and physical
activity are relatively separate domains," said Dr. Eric Rimm of the
Harvard School of Public Health. "There are people who are overweight and
eat poorly and still exercise, and on the other hand, there are people who eat
really well but sit on the couch." An overly narrow focus on 10,000
doesn't encourage an integrated approach to getting healthier.
Finally, 10,000 steps might "be too low
for children," said Jean Philippe-Walhin, an exercise researcher at the
University of Bath -- and kids these days, as you're probably already aware,
aren't doing so hot on the obesity front.
So while 10,000 steps is fun and easy to
remember and a catchy marketing tool in (at least) two languages, maybe it's
time, given just how unhealthy so many people are and how much they'd benefit
from moving around just a little more, to embrace an incremental-improvement
approach to exercise. But even if the science of nutrition and exercise is
complicated, that doesn't mean the take-home message needs to be. "Stand
rather than sit, walk rather than stand, jog rather than walk, and run rather
than jog," wrote Ulf Ekelund, lead author of the European mortality study,
in an email. Tudor-Locke distilled things even further: "Just move more
than before," she said. "Keep moving more than before."
Courtesy of: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/science-of-us/10000-steps-walk-day_b_7604514.html
No comments:
Post a Comment