At a pre-semester retreat in August, the UAB Center for Interprofessional Education and Simulation (CIPES) put that question ...
Short bursts of exercise of around 5 minutes twice a day could help improve heart and lung function, new research suggests.
The good news, then, is that the bar is reasonably low—you don’t need to train like an Olympic athlete to get the benefits of ...
Try five joint-friendly chair moves that engage your core and help flatten belly overhang after 50—no floor work required.
After 45, this 5-move chair circuit tests strength, balance, and endurance—finish it nonstop to prove top-tier fitness.
You don’t need a lot of room to get a quick workout in. In fact, you don’t even need to stand up. YMCA group exercise coordinator Nicole Craig has some easy ideas in this week’s edition of HealthWatch ...
New research has revealed that a single session of weight training can help fight breast cancer. Researchers at Edith Cowan University in Australia investigated how resistance training and ...
But the term has taken off to mean anything where you incorporate a much lower “dose” of something – and still reap the benefits. So, does this work for exercise? If you can’t make time for a ...
Among the many benefits of exercise is its research-backed ability to lower blood pressure. Research suggests that getting regular exercise, even in 10-minute increments, can drop your systolic blood ...
On-your-feet workouts can be great, sure. But what if you want if you sit down and reap the benefits of strength training? Seated exercises while they're good for sneaking in more activity, regardless ...
Hunter Bennett does not work for, consult, own shares in or receive funding from any company or organization that would benefit from this article, and has disclosed no relevant affiliations beyond ...
New research suggests that exercise may not just make us feel younger—it could actually slow or even reverse the body’s molecular clock. By looking at DNA markers of aging, scientists found that ...