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Is sitting killing us?

The heath concerns in spending the day sitting

- February 28, 2014

Travis Saunders, taking a break from sitting. (Nick Pearce photo)
Travis Saunders, taking a break from sitting. (Nick Pearce photo)

We know that being a couch potato may not be the picture of health. But it’s allowed as long as we are physically active, right?

Wrong.

Travis Saunders, a Heart and Stroke Postdoctoral Fellow in HÂŝğ­â€™s Department of Medicine, researches the detrimental health impacts of sitting. Earlier this week, he shared insights with Dal staff and faculty at a professional development workshop hosted by Human Resources as part of its "Move More Month" initiative.

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“I was one of those people we now refer to as an ‘active couch potato,’” says Dr. Saunders, a cross-country athlete during his undergraduate and master's degrees. “I was running an hour to an hour and a half a day, so far exceeding any physical activity guidelines,” he explains. “I thought I was this paragon of health, but then I realized that actually it’s still bad for me to sit, even if I’m active.”

Along with guidance from his PhD supervisor, Dr. Saunders’s interest in the relationship between sedentary activity and health came from his personal experience. (He received a PhD in Human Kinetics from the University of Ottawa last year.)

Shutting down the pumps


So just how is sitting affecting us?

Dr. Saunders’ research focuses on how sitting, even paired with physical activity, can be bad for our health. It prevents sugar and fat from being pumped out of our blood and into our muscles. He says our muscles are like little vacuum pumps that suck the sugar and fat out of our blood.

“So when we’re sitting for a long time, those pumps shut off and no more sugar and fat are going into your muscles. It just ends up building up in your blood.”

What’s more, sitting in front of a computer or a TV screen contributes further to a decline in health because it makes us want to eat more. Saunders says mental work, along with food commercials on television, is actually proven to increase our food intake.

“That’s why sitting in front of a TV is bad because not only are you not burning calories, not only are these metabolic pumps shutting off in your muscles, but you are also going to eat more than you need,” Dr. Saunders says. “It’s this trifecta of bad health.”

Getting off the chair


That’s tough news to hear when so much of our work is done at a computer desk. Luckily, Dr. Saunders’s research also looks at how we can reverse our sitting habits.

While working on his PhD research, Dr. Saunders practiced what he was starting to preach. He set up a homemade standing workstation using an IKEA laptop desk and old textbooks, allowing him to switch between standing and sitting. He encouraged hospital staff to do “walking meetings,” arranging for timed, planned-out walking routes to be put on the database so groups could book according to how much time was needed.

“You can review your day and look at what things you do sitting down because you need to sit, and what things you do sitting down because that’s just what you do,” says Dr. Saunders.

Even getting up every 20 or 30 minutes can get the blood flowing and the vacuum pumps working.

Dr. Saunders is originally from Fredericton, and was excited by the opportunity to move back to the Maritimes for his post-doctoral work.

You can read more about his work online at his blog, .

“It’s a way to take research and translate it so someone who doesn’t have a research background can understand why the research matters and why it applies to their lives,” he says.