Phys Ed: To Avoid the Pitfalls of Inactivity, Just Walk Away.

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  • Author(s): Reynolds, Gretchen
  • Source:
    New York Times. 3/6/2012, Vol. 161 Issue 55702, p5. 0p.
  • Additional Information
    • Subject Terms:
    • Abstract:
      CORRECTION APPENDED Hoping to learn more about how inactivity affects disease risk, researchers at the University of Missouri recently persuaded a group of healthy, active young adults to stop moving around so much. Scientists have known for some time that sedentary people are at increased risk of developing heart disease and Type 2 diabetes. But they haven't fully understood why, in part because studying the effects of sedentary behavior isn't easy. People who are inactive may also be obese, eat poorly or face other lifestyle or metabolic issues that make it impossible to tease out the specific role that inactivity, on its own, plays in ill health. So, to combat the problem, researchers lately have embraced a novel approach to studying the effects of inactivity. They've imposed the condition on people who otherwise would be out happily exercising and moving about, in some cases by sentencing them to bed rest. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]