The States That Exercise Least

88m3

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A new CDC report highlights geographical trends in leisure-time physical activity.

OLGA KHAZAN6:00 AM ET


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In Mississippi, just 14 percent of adults get enough exercise, like these two were in Long Beach, Mississippi, in 2010. SEAN GARDNER / REUTERS
The federal government recommends that every week we all do “muscle-strengthening” activities at least twice, along with 150 minutes of “moderate intensity” aerobic physical activity. However, only about 23 percent of U.S. adults actually manage to work out this much during their leisure hours, according to a new CDC report released Thursday.

And, the CDC found, the percentage of people who get enough exercise varies greatly by state, from a low of 13.5 percent of adults in Mississippi to a high of 32.5 percent in Colorado.

Percent of adults who met both the federal guidelines on physical activity, by state
Men are more likely than women to get enough exercise, and less than 10 percent of women in Mississippi work out sufficiently (compared to 31.5 percent in Colorado). People who had jobs were also more likely to get enough exercise than those who didn’t, potentially because of the high cost of gyms. (The study only measured physical activity performed outside of work, not commuting or physical activity done on the job.)

In 13 states—Alabama, Arkansas, Florida, Georgia, Indiana, Kentucky, Mississippi, New York, Oklahoma, South Carolina, South Dakota, Tennessee, and West Virginia—a significantly lower percentage of adults got enough exercise than the national average. Most of these states are in the southeast, which is sometimes referred to as the “Stroke Belt.” As Claire Suddath once wrote for Time, some areas of the southeast U.S. lack public transportation options and even sidewalks. It’s also too hot to exercise outside much of the year, unlike in healthier states such as Colorado or Minnesota. Also, people who are already in poor health—as people in places like Kentucky disproportionately are—tend to exercise less, the CDC notes.

Meanwhile, in 14 states—Alaska, Arizona, California, Colorado, Idaho, Illinois, Massachusetts, Minnesota, New Hampshire, Pennsylvania, Vermont, Utah, Washington, and Wyoming—and the District of Columbia, a significantly higher percentage of adults exercised enough, compared to the national average. Several of these states are in the mountainous, activity-filled west, but others are simply wealthier than average. According to the CDC, “people in professional and managerial occupations” are more likely to get enough exercise.

Although exercise is not the best way to lose weight, people who exercise tend to have a lower risk of chronic disease, disability, and premature mortality. The differences in physical activity among the states is yet another example of how where you live determines how healthy you are.



CDC Report Highlights the States That Exercise Least and Most - The Atlantic


:patrice:
 

re'up

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lol @ 'Stroke Belt"

( all due respect to those who may live in those areas, and don't have the education or socioeconomic status to live healthily)
 

Killah Ray

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I see it all the time at work....

Cholesterol levels on some 20 year olds have you looking like...:scusthov:
 

Serious

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I see it all the time at work....

Cholesterol levels on some 20 year olds have you looking like...:scusthov:
Whenever I have a connecting flight through the "stroke belt" / the south in some place like NC, SC or FL, I'm amazed by the prevalence of overweight people in the airport man....

It's like everyone in the airport is not just overweight, but obese......LA isn't perfect because there's tons of overweight people as well....
 

re'up

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The comparison is probably too polarizing to mean too much, but I will never forget in 2015, the airport lounge contrast between Paris and Dallas Fort Worth, as I caught the connecting flight home. The people in the DFW lounge were much, much heavier all around, and just the kind of obesity, rolls hanging out of t shirts, with shorts. Not to mention the general appearance of everyone was kind of appalling. I realize Paris is maybe the fashion capital of the world, besides Milan, but fukk, did DFW look like the worst version of American.
 

Swirv

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lol @ 'Stroke Belt"

( all due respect to those who may live in those areas, and don't have the education or socioeconomic status to live healthily)
Poor excuse. People know better but they somehow can’t get on track.
 
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