Tuesday, April 17, 2007

WEIGHT-LOSS PLATEAUS AND PITFALLS


It's kind of like running into a wall - that feeling you get when, after a few months on a weight-loss program, you suddenly stop seeing results. This is called hitting a plateau and it is not uncommon. In fact, unless you continually update your program to reflect the changes your body has already experienced, you can almost be guaranteed to plateau at some point along your journey toward reaching your goal weight.

Weight-loss Woes
The first thing you should do upon hitting a plateau is try to determine the cause. Could you be eating more calories than you think? Research shows that most people underreport the number of calories they eat - it's not that they're lying, they just don't know how to make an accurate assessment of how much they're eating. And even if you're eating less calories than before you lost the weight, you could be eating just enough to maintain your current weight at your current activity level. It is important to keep in mind that as you lose weight, your metabolism slows down because there is less of you to fuel, both at rest and during activity. So, while a diet of 1,800 calories per day helped you lose a certain amount of weight, if you've hit a plateau, it could be that 1,800 calories is the exact amount you need to stay at your current weight.

Exercise Your Options
This leaves you with two options: Lower your caloric intake further or increase the amount of time you spend being physically active. The first option is less desirable because you may not be able to get sufficient nutrients from a diet that is very low in calories, and it is difficult to stick to it for very long. It is much better to moderately reduce calories to a level that you can sustain when you reach your goal weight. The same is true for exercise. Trying to exercise for several hours per day to burn more calories is a good way to set yourself up for failure. Not only does this type of regimen require an enormous time commitment, it is hard on the body, making you more susceptible to injury and overuse syndromes.

To help balance the intake with the expenditure, a good rule of thumb is to multiply your goal weight by 10 calories per pound, and add more calories according to how active you are. Again, be realistic. Don't attempt too much in an effort to burn more calories. Instead, aim for 30 minutes of moderate activity most of the days of the week and, as you become more fit, gradually increase the intensity and duration of your exercise sessions. Choose activities that you find enjoyable, whether that be in-line skating, step classes or even mall walking.

Another means for getting you off the plateau is strength training, which has been shown to be very effective in helping people manage their weight because the added muscle helps to offset the metabolism-lowering effect of dieting and losing weight. Muscle is much more metabolically active than fat; therefore, the more muscle you can add, the higher your metabolism will be.

Get Off The Plateau
If you've stopped losing weight, the key to getting off the plateau is to vary your program. The human body is an amazing piece of machinery, capable of adapting to just about any circumstance or stimulus.

By shaking things up a bit and varying your program by introducing some new elements, you'll likely find yourself off the plateau and back on the road to progress in no time.

Used with permission - All ACE Fit Facts are copyrighted by the American Council on Exercise (ACE) and cannot be used for widespread distribution, either in print or via electronic means, without written permission from ACE.

Monday, March 05, 2007

How Women Build Muscle

There are more myths and misconceptions about strength training than any other area of fitness. While research continues to uncover more and more reasons why working out with weights is good for you, many women continue to avoid resistance training for fear of developing muscles of herculean proportions.

Other women have tried it and been less than thrilled with the results. Don't worry, people say. Women can't build muscle like men. They don't have enough testosterone. This is, in fact, only partly true.

Many women, believing they wouldn't build muscle, hit the gym with a vengeance and then wondered why, after several weeks of resistance training, their clothes didn't fit and they had gained muscle weight.

The truth is, not everyone responds to training in quite the same way. While testosterone plays a role in muscle development, the answer to why some men and women increase in muscle size and others don't, lies within our DNA.

We are predisposed to respond to exercise in a particular way, in large part, because of our genetics. Our genetic makeup determines what types of muscle fibers we have and where they are distributed. It determines our ratio of testosterone to estrogen and where we store body fat. And it also determines our body type.

A question of body type

All women fall under one of three body classifications, or are a combination of types. Mesomorphs tend to be muscular, endomorphs are more rounded and voluptuous and ectomorphs are slim or linear in shape. Mesomorphs respond to strength training by building muscle mass much faster than their ectomorphic counterparts, even though they may be following identical training regimens.

Endomorphs generally need to lose body fat in order to see a change in size or shape as a result of strength training. Ectomorphs are less likely to build muscle mass but will become stronger as a result of resistance training.

Building just your heart muscle

One of the fundamental principles of strength training is that if you overload the muscle, you will increase its size. With aerobic training, the overload is typically your body weight. Activities such as step/bench training or stair-stepping result in changes in the size and shape of the muscles of the lower body. Increasing the height of the step or adding power movements increases the overload.

For those concerned about building muscle, it would be better to reduce the step height or lower the impact of the movements. While this may reduce the aerobic value of the workout, it also will decrease the amount of overload on the muscles, making it less likely that you will build more muscle.

Training by the rules

When it comes to strength training, the old rule still applies: to get stronger, work with heavier weights and perform fewer repetitions. To promote endurance, use lighter weights and complete more repetitions.

It's encouraging to note that just like men, most women will experience a 20 percent to 40 percent increase in muscular strength after several months of resistance training.

Understanding your body type and how you might respond to exercise can help you set realistic goals and expectations. Avoid comparisons to others you see, at the gym or elsewhere, and remember that no two people are alike.

Focus on how good exercise makes you feel rather than how you would like to look. Accepting our bodies for what they are is a great way to get rid of the guilt or pressure we often feel to look a certain way.

Used with permission - All ACE Fit Facts are copyrighted by the American Council on Exercise (ACE) and cannot be used for widespread distribution, either in print or via electronic means, without written permission from ACE.

Tuesday, November 21, 2006

Your New Year's Exercise Resolution - now is the time to make a plan

Here is the scenario: you are standing around at a New Year's Eve party. Someone poses a question to all within earshot "So what are your resolutions for the New Year?" Just about everyone, including you, agrees that they would like to start an exercise program and lose some weight.

Now jump ahead a day or day two. You've got your first workout in for the New Year. This could be a 30 minute walk or a trip to the gym, it doesn't matter. The point is, you've got a start. Over the next week you get in three more workouts, no problem. The following week, you miss one, things got busy at work. The next week you miss all of your exercise sessions, things are still busy at work and you feel a cold coming on. Two more weeks pass, no more exercise and an identity shift happens. You have gone from someone with a positive "I can do it" attitude to one that has failed once again. Your exercise program is history.

This common New Year's resolution scenario leaves us discouraged and with yet another experience of failure chalked up to our behavior change attempts.

There is a simple solution to this problem. It is not that we are lazy, unmotivated or undisciplined. It is that we really don't understand the process of health behavior change. Behavior change experts have developed a theory, which has been supported by numerous studies, showing that people cycle through a variety of stages before a new behavior is successfully adopted over the long term.

Here are the stages as they relate to exercise:


  • Precontemplation - I can't or I won't exercise
  • Contemplation - I need to exercise, but just can't seem to get started
  • Preparation - I am making plans and doing what it takes to get started
  • Action - I have started my exercise program
  • Maintenance - I have been exercising for six months and it is really becoming a habit with me
It is in the preparation stage that the foundation for an exercise habit really takes place. Here are some actions that need to take place in the Preparation stage.


  • What do you want to accomplish? Write down the primary goal or goals of your program.
  • Given your goals, design a goal-specific exercise program (this one will likely require some assistance)
  • Create a fitness vision that you intend to realize in the next three to six months
  • Do your best to foresee the challenges you will face in sticking with your program - things like, busy at work, a winter cold, or uncooperative weather. Put a plan in place for overcoming these challenges as they present themselves.

Remember that this is normal -- if you tried exercising in the past and didn't stick with it, don't consider yourself a failure. Just know that it's time to try again!

By planning and preparing for your exercise endeavor you will significantly increase the likelihood of success in your exercise efforts. Each stage has its own characteristics and best practices in facilitating your progress to the next stage.

Honor yourself by honoring your stage of change. This is a big deal - there is much more to it than just working out. Establishing a consistent exercise habit is a significant life change, it is through proper preparation, planning, and support that you will achieve the goals that you set for yourself.

Monday, November 06, 2006

Measuring Physical Activity Intensity

Adapted from - The Centers for Disease Control

THE TALK TEST
The talk test method of measuring intensity is simple. A person who is active at a light intensity level should be able to sing while doing the activity. One who is active at a moderate intensity level should be able to carry on a conversation comfortably while engaging in the activity. If a person becomes winded or too out of breath to carry on a conversation, the activity can be considered vigorous.


HEART RATE
A second way of monitoring physical activity intensity is to determine whether a person's pulse or heart rate is within the target zone during physical activity.

For moderate-intensity physical activity, a person's target heart rate should be 50 to 70% of his or her maximum heart rate. This maximum rate is based on the person's age. An estimate of a person's maximum age-related heart rate can be obtained by subtracting the person's age from 220. For example, for a 50-year-old person, the estimated maximum age-related heart rate would be calculated as 220 - 50 years = 170 beats per minute (bpm). The 50% and 70% levels would be:

* 50% level: 170 x 0.50 = 85 bpm, and

* 70% level: 170 x 0.70 = 119 bpm

Thus, moderate-intensity physical activity for a 50-year-old person will require that the heart rate remains between 85 and 119 bpm during physical activity.For vigorous-intensity physical activity, a person's target heart rate should be 70 to 85% of his or her maximum heart rate. To calculate this range, follow the same formula as used above, except change "50 and 70%" to "70 and 85%". For example, for a 35-year-old person, the estimated maximum age-related heart rate would be calculated as 220 - 35 years = 185 beats per minute (bpm). The 70% and 85% levels would be:

* 70% level: 185 x 0.70 = 130 bpm, and
* 85% level: 185 x 0.85 = 157 bpm

Thus, vigorous-intensity physical activity for a 35-year-old person will require that the heart rate remains between 130 and 157 bpm during physical activity.


PERCEIVED EXERTION
A third method of determining physical activity intensity is the Borg Rating of Perceived Exertion (RPE). Perceived exertion is how hard you feel like your body is working. It is based on the physical sensations a person experiences during physical activity, including increased heart rate, increased respiration or breathing rate, increased sweating, and muscle fatigue. Although this is a subjective measure, a person's exertion rating may provide a fairly good estimate of the actual heart rate during physical activity* (Borg, 1998).

Practitioners generally agree that perceived exertion ratings between 12 to 14 on the Borg Scale suggests that physical activity is being performed at a moderate level of intensity. During activity, use the Borg Scale to assign numbers to how you feel (see instructions below). Self-monitoring how hard your body is working can help you adjust the intensity of the activity by speeding up or slowing down your movements.

Through experience of monitoring how your body feels, it will become easier to know when to adjust your intensity. For example, a walker who wants to engage in moderate-intensity activity would aim for a Borg Scale level of "somewhat hard" (12-14). If he describes his muscle fatigue and breathing as "very light" (9 on the Borg Scale) he would want to increase his intensity. On the other hand, if he felt his exertion was "extremely hard" (19 on the Borg Scale) he would need to slow down his movements to achieve the moderate-intensity range.

*A high correlation exists between a person's perceived exertion rating times 10 and the actual heart rate during physical activity; so a person's exertion rating may provide a fairly good estimate of the actual heart rate during activity (Borg, 1998). For example, if a person's rating of perceived exertion (RPE) is 12, then 12 x 10 = 120; so the heart rate should be approximately 120 beats per minute. Note that this calculation is only an approximation of heart rate, and the actual heart rate can vary quite a bit depending on age and physical condition.

The Borg Rating of Perceived Exertion is also the preferred method to assess intensity among those individuals who take medications that affect heart rate or pulse.
Instructions for Borg Rating of Perceived Exertion (RPE) Scale

While doing physical activity, we want you to rate your perception of exertion. This feeling should reflect how heavy and strenuous the exercise feels to you, combining all sensations and feelings of physical stress, effort, and fatigue. Do not concern yourself with any one factor such as leg pain or shortness of breath, but try to focus on your total feeling of exertion.

Look at the rating scale below while you are engaging in an activity; it ranges from 6 to 20, where 6 means "no exertion at all" and 20 means "maximal exertion." Choose the number from below that best describes your level of exertion. This will give you a good idea of the intensity level of your activity, and you can use this information to speed up or slow down your movements to reach your desired range.

Try to appraise your feeling of exertion as honestly as possible, without thinking about what the actual physical load is. Your own feeling of effort and exertion is important, not how it compares to other people's. Look at the scales and the expressions and then give a number.


6 No exertion at all
7
Extremely light (7.5)
8
9 Very light
10
11 Light
12
13 Somewhat hard
14
15 Hard (heavy)
16
17 Very hard
18
19 Extremely hard
20 Maximal exertion

- 9 corresponds to "very light" exercise. For a healthy person, it is like walking slowly at his or her own pace for some minutes
- 13 on the scale is "somewhat hard" exercise, but it still feels OK to continue.
- 17 "very hard" is very strenuous. A healthy person can still go on, but he or she really has to push him- or herself. It feels very heavy, and the person is very tired.

- 19 on the scale is an extremely strenuous exercise level. For most people this is the most strenuous exercise they have ever experienced.


Borg RPE scale © Gunnar Borg, 1970, 1985, 1994, 1998

Thursday, August 31, 2006

Fitness Fundamentals: Guidelines for Personal Exercise Programs

Source: the President's Council on Physical Fitness and Sports

MAKING A COMMITMENT

You have taken the important first step on the path to physical fitness by seeking information. The next step is to decide that you are going to be physically fit. This pamphlet is designed to help you reach that decision and your goal.

The decision to carry out a physical fitness program cannot be taken lightly. It requires a lifelong commitment of time and effort. Exercise must become one of those things that you do without question, like bathing and brushing your teeth. Unless you are convinced of the benefits of fitness and the risks of unfitness, you will not succeed.

Patience is essential. Don't try to do too much too soon and don't quit before you have a chance to experience the rewards of improved fitness. You can't regain in a few days or weeks what you have lost in years of sedentary living, but you can get it back if your persevere. And the prize is worth the price.

In the following pages you will find the basic information you need to begin and maintain a personal physical fitness program. These guidelines are intended for the average healthy adult. It tells you what your goals should be and how often, how long and how hard you must exercise to achieve them. It also includes information that will make your workouts easier, safer and more satisfying. The rest is up to you.

CHECKING YOUR HEALTH

If you're under 35 and in good health, you don't need to see a doctor before beginning an exercise program. But if you are over 35 and have been inactive for several years, you should consult your physician, who may or may not recommend a graded exercise test. Other conditions that indicate a need for medical clearance are:

  • High blood pressure.
  • Heart trouble.
  • Family history of early stroke or heart attack deaths.
  • Frequent dizzy spells.
  • Extreme breathlessness after mild exertion.
  • Arthritis or other bone problems.
  • Severe muscular, ligament or tendon problems.
  • Other known or suspected disease.

Vigorous exercise involves minimal health risks for persons in good health or those following a doctor's advice. Far greater risks are presented by habitual inactivity and obesity.

DEFINING FITNESS

Physical fitness is to the human body what fine tuning is to an engine. It enables us to perform up to our potential. Fitness can be described as a condition that helps us look, feel and do our best. More specifically, it is:

"The ability to perform daily tasks vigorously and alertly, with energy left over for enjoying leisure- time activities and meeting emergency demands. It is the ability to endure, to bear up, to withstand stress, to carry on in circumstances where an unfit person could not continue, and is a major basis for good health and well-being."

Physical fitness involves the performance of the heart and lungs, and the muscles of the body. And, since what we do with our bodies also affects what we can do with our minds, fitness influences to some degree qualities such as mental alertness and emotional stability.

As you undertake your fitness program, it's important to remember that fitness is an individual quality that varies from person to person. It is influenced by age, sex, heredity, personal habits, exercise and eating practices. You can't do anything about the first three factors. However, it is within your power to change and improve the others where needed.

KNOWING THE BASICS

Physical fitness is most easily understood by examining its components, or "parts." There is widespread agreement that these four components are basic:

Cardiorespiratory Endurance - the ability to deliver oxygen and nutrients to tissues, and to remove wastes, over sustained periods of time. Long runs and swims are among the methods employed in measuring this component.

Muscular Strength - the ability of a muscle to exert force for a brief period of time. Upper-body strength, for example, can be measured by various weight-lifting exercises.

Muscular Endurance - the ability of a muscle, or a group of muscles, to sustain repeated contractions or to continue applying force against a fixed object. Pushups are often used to test endurance of arm and shoulder muscles.

Flexibility - the ability to move joints and use muscles through their full range of motion. The sit-and- reach test is a good measure of flexibility of the lower back and backs of the upper legs.

Body Composition is often considered a component of fitness. It refers to the makeup of the body in terms of lean mass (muscle, bone, vital tissue and organs) and fat mass. An optimal ratio of fat to lean mass is an indication of fitness, and the right types of exercises will help you decrease body fat and increase or maintain muscle mass.

A WORKOUT SCHEDULE

How often, how long and how hard you exercise, and what kinds of exercises you do should be determined by what you are trying to accomplish. Your goals, your present fitness level, age, health, skills, interest and convenience are among the factors you should consider. For example, an athlete training for high-level competition would follow a different program than a person whose goals are good health and the ability to meet work and recreational needs.

Your exercise program should include something from each of the four basic fitness components described previously. Each workout should begin with a warmup and end with a cooldown. As a general rule, space your workouts throughout the week and avoid consecutive days of hard exercise.

Here are the amounts of activity necessary for the average healthy person to maintain a minimum level of overall fitness. Included are some of the popular exercises for each category.

WARMUP - 5-10 minutes of exercise such as walking, slow jogging, knee lifts, arm circles or trunk rotations. Low intensity movements that simulate movements to be used in the activity can also be included in the warmup.

MUSCULAR STRENGTH - a minimum of two 20-minute sessions per week that include exercises for all the major muscle groups. Lifting weights is the most effective way to increase strength.

MUSCULAR ENDURANCE - at least three 30-minute sessions each week that include exercises such as calisthenics, pushups, situps, pullups, and weight training for all the major muscle groups.

CARDIORESPIRATORY ENDURANCE - at least three 20-minute bouts of continuous aerobic (activity requiring oxygen) rhythmic exercise each week. Popular aerobic conditioning activities include brisk walking, jogging, swimming, cycling, rope-jumping, rowing, cross-country skiing, and some continuous action games like racquetball and handball.

FLEXIBILITY - 10-12 minutes of daily stretching exercises performed slowly, without a bouncing motion. This can be included after a warmup or during a cooldown.

COOL DOWN - a minimum of 5-10 minutes of slow walking, low-level exercise, combined with stretching.

A MATTER OF PRINCIPLE

The keys to selecting the right kinds of exercises for developing and maintaining each of the basic components of fitness are found in these principles:

SPECIFICITY - pick the right kind of activities to affect each component. Strength training results in specific strength changes. Also, train for the specific activity you're interested in. For example, optimal swimming performance is best achieved when the muscles involved in swimming are trained for the movements required. It does not necessarily follow that a good runner is a good swimmer.

OVERLOAD - work hard enough, at levels that are vigorous and long enough to overload your body above its resting level, to bring about improvement.

REGULARITY - you can't hoard physical fitness. At least three balanced workouts a week are necessary to maintain a desirable level of fitness.

PROGRESSION - increase the intensity, frequency and/or duration of activity over periods of time in order to improve.

Some activities can be used to fulfill more than one of your basic exercise requirements. For example, in addition to increasing cardiorespiratory endurance, running builds muscular endurance in the legs, and swimming develops the arm, shoulder and chest muscles. If you select the proper activities, it is possible to fit parts of your muscular endurance workout into your cardiorespiratory workout and save time.

MEASURING YOUR HEART RATE

Heart rate is widely accepted as a good method for measuring intensity during running, swimming, cycling, and other aerobic activities. Exercise that doesn't raise your heart rate to a certain level and keep it there for 20 minutes won't contribute significantly to cardiovascular fitness.

The heart rate you should maintain is called your target heart rate. There are several ways of arriving at this figure. One of the simplest is: maximum heart rate (220 - age) x 70%. Thus, the target heart rate for a 40 year-old would be 126.

Some methods for figuring the target rate take individual differences into consideration. Here is one of them:

  • Subtract age from 220 to find maximum heart rate.

  • Subtract resting heart rate (see below) from maximum heart rate to determine heart rate reserve.

  • Take 70% of heart rate reserve to determine heart rate raise.

  • Add heart rate raise to resting heart rate to find target rate.

Resting heart rate should be determined by taking your pulse after sitting quietly for five minutes. When checking heart rate during a workout, take your pulse within five seconds after interrupting exercise because it starts to go down once you stop moving. Count pulse for 10 seconds and multiply by six to get the per-minute rate.

CONTROLLING YOUR WEIGHT

The key to weight control is keeping energy intake (food) and energy output (physical activity) in balance. When you consume only as many calories as your body needs, your weight will usually remain constant. If you take in more calories than your body needs, you will put on excess fat. If you expend more energy than you take in you will burn excess fat.

Exercise plays an important role in weight control by increasing energy output, calling on stored calories for extra fuel. Recent studies show that not only does exercise increase metabolism during a workout, but it causes your metabolism to stay increased for a period of time after exercising, allowing you to burn more calories.

How much exercise is needed to make a difference in your weight depends on the amount and type of activity, and on how much you eat. Aerobic exercise burns body fat. A medium-sized adult would have to walk more than 30 miles to burn up 3,500 calories, the equivalent of one pound of fat. Although that may seem like a lot, you don't have to walk the 30 miles all at once. Walking a mile a day for 30 days will achieve the same result, providing you don't increase your food intake to negate the effects of walking.

If you consume 100 calories a day more than your body needs, you will gain approximately 10 pounds in a year. You could take that weight off, or keep it off, by doing 30 minutes of moderate exercise daily. The combination of exercise and diet offers the most flexible and effective approach to weight control.

Since muscle tissue weighs more than fat tissue, and exercise develops muscle to a certain degree, your bathroom scale won't necessarily tell you whether or not you are "fat." Well-muscled individuals, with relatively little body fat, invariably are "overweight" according to standard weight charts. If you are doing a regular program of strength training, your muscles will increase in weight, and possibly your overall weight will increase. Body composition is a better indicator of your condition than body weight.

Lack of physical activity causes muscles to get soft, and if food intake is not decreased, added body weight is almost always fat. Once-active people, who continue to eat as they always have after settling into sedentary lifestyles, tend to suffer from "creeping obesity."

CLOTHING

All exercise clothing should be loose-fitting to permit freedom of movement, and should make the wearer feel comfortable and self-assured.

As a general rule, you should wear lighter clothes than temperatures might indicate. Exercise generates great amounts of body heat. Light-colored clothing that reflects the sun's rays is cooler in the summer, and dark clothes are warmer in winter. When the weather is very cold, it's better to wear several layers of light clothing than one or two heavy layers. The extra layers help trap heat, and it's easy to shed one of them if you become too warm.

In cold weather, and in hot, sunny weather, it's a good idea to wear something on your head. Wool watch or ski caps are recommended for winter wear, and some form of tennis or sailor's hat that provides shade and can be soaked in water is good for summer.

Never wear rubberized or plastic clothing, such garments interfere with the evaporation of perspiration and can cause body temperature to rise to dangerous levels.

The most important item of equipment for the runner is a pair of sturdy, properly-fitting running shoes. Training shoes with heavy, cushioned soles and arch supports are preferable to flimsy sneakers and light racing flats.

WHEN TO EXERCISE

The hour just before the evening meal is a popular time for exercise. The late afternoon workout provides a welcome change of pace at the end of the work day and helps dissolve the day's worries and tensions.

Another popular time to work out is early morning, before the work day begins. Advocates of the early start say it makes them more alert and energetic on the job.

Among the factors you should consider in developing your workout schedule are personal preference, job and family responsibilities, availability of exercise facilities and weather. It's important to schedule your workouts for a time when there is little chance that you will have to cancel or interrupt them because of other demands on your time.

You should not exercise strenuously during extremely hot, humid weather or within two hours after eating. Heat and/or digestion both make heavy demands on the circulatory system, and in combination with exercise can be an overtaxing double load.

Wednesday, August 02, 2006

MyExercisePlan.com On The Web

New York Times - Online Trainers Keep Their Distance (PDF) - Clients answer a series of questions covering health history, exercise history, favorite activities and their goals. MyExercisePlan.com then generates personalized workouts retrievable from the Web site. Clients can keep track of their progress on the site, post questions on the online forum.

ConsumerReports.org - Diet and fitness support, online - "MyExercisePlan.com offers a quiz to assess your current fitness level and personal barriers to exercise and then tailors advice to get you moving."

IndyStar.com - Take high-tech route to fitness - MyExercisePlan.com, offers a personalized exercise program based on your fitness level, personal goals and home equipment.

WebMD - 7 Most Effective Exercises - Experts offer their favorite moves for making the most of your workout time. Richard Cotton, chief exercise physiologist, MyExercisePlan.com.

AmericanBaby.com - Blast 500 Calories a Day - If the idea of exercising for an hour is daunting, "Don't be discouraged," says Richard Cotton, chief exercise physiologist with MyExercisePlan.com

Health.com : 2005 Best of Fitness Awards: Gear - Judge: Richard Cotton, chief exercise physiologist of MyExercisePlan.com and spokesperson for the American Council on Exercise, and 30-year veteran of the fitness industry.

SDSU Center for Optimal Health and Performance - affilitation with MyExercisePlan.com

The Honolulu Advertiser - Drop the denial and the pounds - The first thing - and the hardest thing - to do is to get started," said Richard Cotton, Chief Exercise Physiologist at MyExercisePlan.com

CBS News HealthWatch - Worth Their Salt? - "These trainers aren't the Dalai Lama." Richard Cotton, chief exercise physiologist at MyExercisePlan.com

WashingtonPost.com - Watch Your Back - "Our most neglected dorsal area is the lower back", said Richard Cotton, chief exercise physiologist of the Web site MyExercisePlan.com.

SignOnSanDiego.com > News > Health -- Losing resolve? - "Some people will use any excuse they can think of so they don't have to exercise. But, they're only kidding and hurting themselves," says Richard Cotton, chief exercise physiologist with MyExercisePlan.com.

SignOnSanDiego.com > News > Features -- Making it count - "Your pedometer may not be absolutely correct, but it's probably relatively correct," says Richard Cotton, chief exercise physiologist with MyExercisePlan.com.

LifeTime Fitness - Fitness Redefined - Our values around physical fitness naturally shift with age, says Richard Cotton, MA, chief exercise physiologist with www.myexerciseplan.com

WebMD - Quick Weight Loss or Quackery from OnHealth -"They're a waste of money," says Richard Cotton, a spokesman for the American Council on Exercise and chief exercise physiologist for MyExercisePlan.com.

Tuesday, June 06, 2006

How MyExercisePlan.com Works

There are two things that people need when they are beginning an exercise program or in need of establishing a consistent habit:

  • Accurate Information
  • High-quality Support
MyExercisePlan.com provides both. In fact, MyExercisePlan.com provides both in a manner that you will not find anywhere else on the Internet or even in traditional one-on-one relationships with a fitness professional.

Accurate Information

MyExercisePlan.com has been designed to provide you with the highest quality and most personalized programs that you can find anywhere. We will not try to sell you any supplements or make promises that we can't keep. We follow much the same process that you would follow with a personal trainer.
  • Assessment
  • Program Development
  • Ongoing Support
Assessment

The initial assessment is divided into two segments:
  • Pre-exercise Health Assessment
  • Fitness Assessment
The pre-exercise health assessment follows the standards and guidelines developed by the American College of Sports Medicine. It provides you with a recommendation for a pre-exercise evaluation by your personal physician as well as feedback that is valuable in lowering your risk for a variety of health challenges.

The fitness assessment evaluates your current level of physical activity and places you in a category of beginning, intermediate or established for your aerobic, strength and flexibility programs. the categories assigned are not across-the-board for the three components. You very well could be "established" in your aerobic program and "beginner" in the strength and flexibility components. There are a total of 27 different combinations of fitness levels (beginning, intermediate, established) and training components (aerobic, strength, flexibility) programmed into the system.

Exercise Program Development

The development of your exercise program begins with the selection of your program.

General Programs
  • Weight Loss
  • Muscular Strength & Endurance
  • Heart Disease Risk Reduction
  • Health Maintenance
  • Stress Management
  • Exercising Safely During Pregnancy
Sports Specific
  • Golf Fitness
  • Tennis Fitness
  • Softball Fitness
  • Snowboard & Ski Fitness
Rehabilitation
  • Exercise During Cancer Treatments
  • High Blood Pressure Management
  • Diabetes Management (Type 1)
  • Diabetes Management (Type 2)
  • Weight Loss Following Gastric Bypass Surgery
  • Cardiac Rehab (CAD, MI, CAB, PTCA)
Your program selection is then matched with your fitness level (beginning, intermediate, established) in each of the training components (aerobic, strength and flexibility). The training program that is developed for you is highly personalized based on your program selection, fitness level, age, health status, gender and personal preferences.

Aerobic Program Development

The first step in developing your personalized aerobic exercise program is to pick the activities that you both prefer and are specific to your program and health status.
  • Cycling - outdoor or stationary
  • Elliptical Trainer
  • Group Exercise
  • Rowing - outdoor or stationary
  • Running - outdoor or treadmill
  • Stepper
  • Swimming
  • Walking - outdoor or treadmill
The program then takes you through the development of the remaining aerobic exercise variables:
  • How hard to exercise in terms of heart rate, perceived exertion and the talk test.
  • How long each session should be.
  • How many workouts per week
These guidelines are based on your program selection, fitness level, age and health status.

Strength Training Program Development

The development of your personalized strength training program starts with the selection of the strength equipment that you both prefer and have access to.
  • Bodyweight
  • Dumbbells
  • Barbells
  • Exercise Tubing
  • Weight Machines
  • Exercise Ball
You are then taken through the the development of the rest of your strength program:
  • Sets, repetitions and weight
  • How many times per week
  • Choose from a variety of goal-specific programs

As with the aerobic program, these guidelines are based on your program selection, fitness level, age and health status.

Stretching Program


MyExercisePlan.com provides a variety of static stretching programs based on your program selection, fitness level, age and health status.

High-quality Support

What good is a personalized program if you are not going to stick with it! MyExercisePlan.com provides with the most powerful tools that you will find anywhere to empower you to make exercise a lifelong habit.
  • Tools for Success
  • Barriers to Exercise Assessment
  • Readiness Assessment
We recognize that very few people live to exercise. However, we do know how important regular exercise is to living a life of energy and vitality. Our tools are designed to take you to the source of your motivation, to assist you in transforming your relationship with exercise. In transforming your relationship to exercise, our aim is to assist you in transforming your way of being in life. To powerfully take responsibility for the events in your life and live from a powerful perspective of being at cause in life instead effect of things that are happening.

Resource Center

The Resource Center provides with the cutting edge information that you need to fill in the gaps in your health and fitness knowledge.
  • Q&A Forum - get your questions answered by a certified and experienced fitness professional
  • Nutrition Analyzer - get a sense of the calories, carbohydrates, fat and protein contained in the foods you are eating
  • Resource Library - articles on health, fitness and nutrition topics
  • Frequently Asked Questions - common questions frequently asked by exercisers
  • Helpful Links - to other high-quality health and fitness sites
There is no exact right way to use the features of the site, although we do encourage you to spend some time getting to know the site and to give all of the features a try.