• Skip to main content
  • Skip to secondary menu
  • Skip to primary sidebar
  • Skip to footer
nutrition health writer

Thinking Nutrition

For the latest nutrition research and controversies

  • Home
  • About
  • Podcast
  • Blog
    • Allergies
    • Cancer
    • Child Health
    • Collagen
    • Diabetes
    • Eating Well
    • Getting Active
    • Gut Health
    • Heart Health
    • Inflammation
    • Managing Weight
    • Mental Health
    • Mythbusting
    • Nutrition Supplements
    • Women?s Health
  • In the Media
  • Services
  • Contact
  • Search
You are here: Home / Getting Active / Can’t find time to exercise? The solution is in front of you

Can’t find time to exercise? The solution is in front of you

April 9, 2014 by Tim Crowe 1 Comment

find time to exercise
Time by Alan Cleaver. CC BY 2.0

Being more active is a goal of most people. Despite best intentions though, a busy life can make it seem just all too hard to find time to exercise on top of all the other demands of life. Now new research has given some clear pointers to just where people ‘find the time’ to fit in exercise in their day.

Taking part in regular exercise – be it the gym, running, yoga, tennis, or a brisk morning walk – has so many health benefits that, if it was possible to take in a pill, everyone would happily take their daily dose. Not everyone though is a driven exerciser and while motivation is important, it can also be the pressure of life that may make it hard to fit in time to exercise.

Many people with active lives, demanding jobs and a family to care for still manage to fit in exercise so what do these people do differently to those still stuck at the starting gate? Surprisingly, there is no clear answer to this question.

To promote an ongoing effective exercise program, it would be invaluable to know where the best places to look for ‘lost time’ would be. And that’s just what a novel research study has done.

Recruiting 129 previously inactive adults (aged 18 to 60 years), researchers closely tracked the daily activity and lifestyle habits of each person for 6 weeks. Each person was randomly allocated to either a moderate (150 minutes per week of extra activity) or extensive (300 minutes per week of more activity) physical activity program or asked to keep the status quo by serving as a control group.

Where to find time to exercise

The findings were both remarkable for an intervention study and intuitive in their conclusions. People allocated to the activity groups indeed spent more time each week engaged in both physical activity and active transport – adding up to between 21 and 45 minutes more physical activity per day than the control group.

The lion’s share of ‘time found’ in the exercise groups were from less TV and videogame time amounting to 50 minutes per day, and to a smaller extent less time in bed. There was a non-significant increase in computer use time in the activity groups which off-set some of the TV reduction time which the researchers thought was because people were doing some additional work at home to fit in exercise during the working day.

The power of this research was from its randomised controlled design and in depth measures of daily physical activity habits. A clear limitation was that the study population was majority female (64%) who were predominantly well educated and in white collar occupations. The full study can be found here.

What it all means

Struggling to find time to exercise? The solution lies in the ‘Off’ button of the TV remote control.

Share this:

  • Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window) Facebook
  • Click to share on X (Opens in new window) X
  • Click to share on LinkedIn (Opens in new window) LinkedIn
  • Click to share on Reddit (Opens in new window) Reddit

Filed Under: Getting Active Tagged With: exercise, physical activity, television, time

Reader Interactions

Comments

  1. Mohamed Noriab says

    March 2, 2017 at 8:50 pm

    Well, it’s also my problem. Watching TV or working on Laptop ….. Nice study

    Reply

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Primary Sidebar

Connect with Me

  • Facebook
  • Instagram
  • LinkedIn
  • RSS
  • Twitter

Sign up for Updates

Loading

Most Popular Posts

  • Broccoli is bad for you, like, really toxic bad
  • Collagen supplements: a promising aid in tendon repair
  • Nutrition for healthy ageing: combating sarcopenia and inflammageing
  • Collagen supplements: the science behind the health benefits
  • Lemon water: is it worth the squeeze or just sour hype?

Get the book

Now in its fifth edition, Understanding Nutrition is the leading text used in nutrition and dietetics courses in Australia and New Zealand. As one of the coauthors, I step you through core topics such as diet planning, macronutrients, vitamins and minerals and follow this with chapters on diet and health, sports nutrition, lifespan nutrition and food safety.

Footer

Privacy policy

Terms of use

Creative Commons License
All content on Thinking Nutrition by Dr Tim Crowe is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License and can be reused with attribution.