Did you know that sitting at your desk all day can be just
as bad for your health as smoking? According to Harvard Medical School, even if
you exercise regularly, a desk job minimizes the health benefits of your
workouts.
Compared to sitting, standing burns slightly more calories — about 0.15 calories per minute. But that tiny difference adds up: a person who weighs 143 pounds could burn an extra 54 calories per day by standing instead of sitting for six hours, as researchers report in the Jan. 1, 2018, European Journal of Preventive Cardiology.
Assuming that person kept eating the same number of calories per day, that translates to 5.5 pounds of weight loss after one year. The estimate comes from data pooled from 46 different studies.
Compared to sitting, standing burns slightly more calories — about 0.15 calories per minute. But that tiny difference adds up: a person who weighs 143 pounds could burn an extra 54 calories per day by standing instead of sitting for six hours, as researchers report in the Jan. 1, 2018, European Journal of Preventive Cardiology.
Assuming that person kept eating the same number of calories per day, that translates to 5.5 pounds of weight loss after one year. The estimate comes from data pooled from 46 different studies.
A separate study of more than 2,600 people ages 60 and older
looked at how sedentary habits affect heart disease risk. Participants reported
how long they sat (on one weekday and one weekend day) at the start of the study
and again two years later. The follow-up lasted an average of just over nine
years. Researchers found that older adults who sat for an average of just under
about three hours a day were 33% less likely to die of cardiovascular disease
than people who sat for an average of about seven hours a day. The study was
published in the March 2018 American Journal of Preventive Medicine.