Diabetic Living Australia — July-August 2017

(avery) #1
diabetic living JULY/AUGUST 2017 81

BEactive


ext time you’re tempted to skip
a gym visit or bypass a brisk walk,
remind yourself that keeping
your body strong is essential if you want
to maintain vitality for as long as you can.

N


The Royal Association of General
Practitioners (RACGP) recommends
that people with diabetes do at
least 30 minutes of moderate
exercise five days a week (150
minutes). This could be a brisk
walk where you sweat but can still
talk. Getting your heart rate up is
crucial, but motivation is key.
To confine exercise to certain
times of the day and a few days
a week is great if that works for
you, but in some ways it misses
the point. A recent Harvard study
reports that for people with type 2
diabetes, exercise reduces BGLs as
well as body fat. In addition to its
positive effect on BGL control,
planned exercise allows you to
set goals and measure your
improvement by the weight you
can lift or the distance you can
run. All good stuff. But this
definition fails to capture the
satisfaction of being active.
Incidental exercise – the type
that involves cycling to the shops,
walking the dog or playing with
the kids in the park – ticks many
boxes and might be the answer
to finding joy in your workout.
Put simply, it’s about moving
more and sitting less.


The more you move, the more
chance you have of gaining the
benefits: lower BGLs, lowered
insulin resistance, increased muscle
strength and bone density, improved
flexibility and enhanced mood.
“Your body is designed to move,”
explains DL accredited exercise
physiologist Christine Armarego,
whose mantra is ‘motion is lotion’.
“Often I see people who have
worked in sedentary jobs that have
left their health in a poor state.”
The result? “They find being active
difficult, which impacts their BGLs.”

Build muscle mass
Armarego encourages people
with diabetes to lift weights.
“As we age, we lose muscle
unless we do something to
keep it,” she says. “Muscle
mass helps us store and
clear glucose.” Essential
for people with diabetes.
Her recommendation? Do
strength training (eight to 10
exercises using weights, your own
body weight or resistance bands)
two or three times a week. “Even
if you’re not the fittest person,
staying active can keep you mobile
and independent for longer.” ➤

Never
skip it

DISCOVER the exercise


that makes you feel good

Free download pdf