Title: 
Thirty Minutes of Exercise a Day Keeps the Doctor Away

Word Count:
528

Summary:
Exercising regularly will help you live longer and be healthier.  Learn how that happens by reading this article.


Keywords:
exercise fitness pedometer heart rate health workout


Article Body:
¡°Exercise is good for you!¡± If you had a dollar for every time you 
heard this statement uttered, you'd be rich by now, right? Well, 
proponents of everyday physical activity aren't just blowing smoke 
when they repeat this mantra. Medical research has uncovered 
resounding evidence to back up this ¡°good for you¡± claim. In fact, 
the U.S. Surgeon General, the American College of Sports 
Medicine (ACSM) and the National Centers for Chronic Disease 
Prevention and Health Promotion all recommend the same thing 
when it comes to regular exercise: American adults should aim for 
30 minutes or more of moderate-intensity physical activity on most, 
and preferably all, days of the week.  

Inquiring minds want to know, so how exactly will daily exercise 
impact your health and well-being? Regular physical activity 
positively affects not only your body but also your mind. That's right: 
Exercise simultaneously improves your physical, your emotional 
and your psychological health. In fact, it's a triple-threat combatant 
against the physical and mental disorders Americans most often 
face: heart disease, diabetes, stroke, stress, anxiety and 
depression, just to name a few.  

When industry experts stand in staunch agreement, you know it's 
time to focus your attention on their advice and take their 
concurring counsel to heart. To that end, consider daily exercise's 
benefits as purported by three of the leading medical sources: the 
American Heart Association, the Surgeon General's Report on 
Exercise and Fitness Management magazine. 

The American Heart Association (AHA) lists a reduction in the risk 
of heart disease at the top of its daily physical activity benefit list. 
Exercise improves circulation throughout the body and lowers 
cholesterol, thereby decreasing the likelihood of a heart attack or 
stroke. The AHA also touts exercise's ability to counteract the health 
problems plaguing today's young people: obesity, high blood 
pressure, high cholesterol and poor lifestyle habits. In so doing, it 
prevents the conditions that lead to heart attacks and strokes later 
in life. 

The U.S. Surgeon General, while echoing the AHA's claims, 
narrows down physical activity's benefits into specific categories. 
Overall, he maintains that exercise reduces one's risk of dying 
prematurely, but explicitly mentions a reduction in heart disease, 
diabetes, high blood pressure, colon cancer, depression and 
anxiety and obesity among its lifesaving advantages. According to 
the U.S. Surgeon General, healthier bones muscles and joints as 
well as improved psychological well-being  are some of the other 
benefits regular exercisers enjoy. 

In an article entitled ¡°The Psychological Benefits of Your Exercise 
Program,¡± Fitness Management magazine further details physical 
activity's favorable effects on emotional and mental health. In 
particular, the article cites the following psychological advantages 
of exercise: 1) It reduces feelings of anxiety, worry, self-doubt and 
uncertainty about the future; 2) It lower stress levels and the 
accompanying physical complaints, such as headaches and 
muscle tension; 3) It energizes, thereby enhancing one's mood; 4) 
It improves sleep quality; and 5) It improves one's self-image and -
confidence by keeping weight down and elevating mood. 

So, while an apple a day is still sound advice, it seems exercising 
every day is the new and improved ticket to keeping the doctor 
away.