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NEWS
INDEX
Archives
2005
September
Conference, campus walk
to showcase health benefits of walking
Melissa
Mitchell, News Editor
217-333-5491; melissa@uiuc.edu
9/28/05
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Click
photo to enlarge |
| UI
File Photo |
| Many
students and faculty and staff members walk regularly
on the indoor track of the UI Armory. To gain more
knowledge about the issues of walking and its health
benefits, the UI and the American College of Sports
Medicine are hosting a conference on the Urbana campus
Oct. 13-15. |
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CHAMPAIGN, Ill.
— Hands down, walking is the easiest, most efficient and inexpensive
form of physical activity known to promote human health, according to
Weimo Zhu, a professor of kinesiology
at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. Yet a large proportion
of the U.S. population does not walk regularly and lives a sedentary
lifestyle, he said.
“The consequence of a sedentary lifestyle to the population’s
health status and economic burden has been significant,” he said,
citing a review of national surveys conducted between 1960 and 2002
that found an estimated 65 percent of the nation’s adults either
were overweight or obese. “In 1996 alone,” he said, “it
is estimated that about 4.19 million cardiovascular disease cases were
associated with obesity, which led to about $22.17 billion in direct
medical costs in that year.”
Zhu believes the first step toward eliminating obesity and escalating
medical costs may be educating the public on the value of incorporating
walking into their daily routines.
“Walk 10,000 steps – or 15,000 if you want to eat whatever
you like – and health problems go away,” he said.
Though researchers have recently developed a better understanding of
walking behavior and its health benefits, Zhu – the inventor of
the term “kinesmetrics,” a discipline that develops and
applies measurement theory, statistics and mathematical analysis to
the field of kinesiology – said “many critical issues in
walking and health remain unknown.”
To gain more knowledge about these issues, the U. of I. and the American
College of Sports Medicine are hosting “Walking for Health: Measurement
and Research Issues and Challenges," Oct. 13-15 on the Urbana campus.
The conference, sponsored by the National Institutes of Health, Centers
for Disease Control and Prevention, Robert Wood Johnson Foundation and
American College of Sports Medicine, takes place at the Illini Union,
1401 W. Green St., Urbana.
Zhu, who is chair of the conference’s organizing and scientific
committees, said the event has been organized to bring together researchers
from all over the world – from a multitude of disciplines –
to share their latest research findings on topics related to walking,
health research and practice. Participants also will explore the latest
technologies and methods for addressing measurement issues.
The walking conference is an extension of an aging and measurement conference
organized at the U. of I. in 2003, and is part of a series of kinesmetrics
symposia organized jointly by the university and the ACSM, and hosted
every other year at the U. of I.
In addition to the usual academic dialogue and research presentations,
conference organizers have planned a number of “legs-on”
sessions, including morning Nordic walking activities, sponsored by
LEKI, a manufacturer of ski, hiking and trekking poles. Organizers worked
with the campus’s Culture of Wellness committee, which proposed
the creation of an annual walk for health and formed a walking subcommittee
to carry out those plans.
With funding and support from a number of
campus units – including the Office
of the Chancellor – the subcommittee will host the campus’s
first “Walk Toward Wellness” event, beginning at noon on
Oct. 14 on the U. of I. Quadrangle. Chancellor Richard Herman and his
wife, Susan, will serve as grand marshals for the walk, scheduled to
start, rain or shine, at the Anniversary Plaza on the south side of
the Illini Union. Registration begins at 11 a.m. The walk has been designated
as an approved campus event, which means civil service employees may
be granted releases from work to attend the event, for up to one hour
without loss of pay.
Zhu said more than 40 national and international researchers in physical
activity and health fields will speak at the conference on topics of
interest not only to researchers, but to the public as well. The roster
of participants, he said, is a virtual “Who’s Who of the
physical activity and health research fields.”
Among them is Yashiro Hatano, known as the “Father of the 10,000
Steps a Day.” Hatanos is known throughout Japan and the world
for his promotion of that plan and its application of the pedometer
to measure walking activity. In the past 12 years, his own pedometer
has recorded 57 million steps – equivalent to once around the
globe.
Another pedometer proponent is the conference keynote speaker, David
Bassett Jr., director of Applied Physiology Laboratory in the department
of exercise, sport and leisure studies at the University of Tennessee.
Bassett and his colleagues are exploring relationships between pedometer-determined
“steps per day” to body weight, blood pressure and other
cardiovascular risk factors.
Also of interest, Zhu said, will be a demonstration by Xiaohong Sun,
a cancer survivor from China selected as one of “100 Against-Cancer
Stars” by the Shanghai government. Sun will demonstrate Quo-Lin
Qi-gong walking, a type of exercise that couples motion with stillness
and meditation and has been widely used in China for cancer care.
Other speakers will address topics such as “Walking and Diabetes”;
“Walking and Obesity: A National Perspective”; “Creating
a Community Friendly Environment for Walking”; “Labyrinth
Walking for Meditation”; and “Walking Behaviors in Children.”
Twelve physical education and health teachers from around the nation
are expected to participate in the conference to discuss and promote
“We Move Kids!,” a program funded by the Robert Wood Johnson
Foundation and designed to promote walking in school settings.
U. of I. researchers participating in the conference include Zhu; kinesiology
and community health department head Wojtek Chodzko-Zajko; kinesiology
professor Edward McAuley; and art
and design professor Kevin Hamilton.
In addition to conference and related activities on the U. of I. campus,
Zhu said a number of local groups and not-for-profit organizations are
sponsoring fund-raising walks and other types of walking events throughout
the community in October. More information about those events is available
by contacting Heidi Krahling, 217-265-5264; hkrahlin@uiuc.edu.
More information about the conference, including a complete program
of events and speakers, is available at http://www.acsm.org/meetings/walkingconference2005.htm.
More information about the “Walk Toward Wellness” is available
at http://www.counselingcenter.uiuc.edu/WellnessWalk.htm.
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