Housework 'not strenuous enough' for exercise targets

Housework and DIY are not strenuous enough to count towards people's activity

targets, a paper has found.

It had been thought they could count towards the recommended 150 minutes of

moderately intense activity per week.

But the BMC Public Health study, which surveyed over 4,500 adults, found those

who counted housework were heavier than those who did other activities.

Experts said activities only counted when they made breathing more rapid and

the heart beat faster.

NHS recommendations do say housework does not count towards the 150-minute

goal.

But the researchers in this paper say there has been a move towards promoting a

"lifestyle approach" to physical activity - encouraging "domestic" activities

in people who may not take part in sports or go to the gym.

And they warn that, while any activity is better than none, people should be

aware that they still need to meet the moderate activity target on top.

Eating too much?

Participants completed a detailed interview about their activity levels,

whether they played any sports or did formal exercise as well as their diet and

smoking and drinking habits.

They were particularly asked about activity linked to looking after their

homes.

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Your exercise should make you breathe harder, feel warmer, and make your heart

beat faster than usual.

Chris Allen, British Heart Foundation

Domestic housework in 10 minute bursts or more accounted for 36% of the

reported moderate to vigorous physical activity people said they did.

But when weight and height were taken into account, researchers found that

those who counted housework as exercise were heavier than people doing other

exercise for the same amount of time.

Among women, just a fifth reached the weekly exercise target if housework was

discounted.

The research team, which included experts from the Universities of Ulster,

Sheffield Hallam and Wolverhampton as well as Sport Northern Ireland concluded:

"Domestic physical activity accounts for a significant proportion of

self-reported daily moderate to vigorous physical activity particularly among

females and older adults.

"However such activity is negatively associated with leanness, suggesting that

such activity may not be sufficient to provide all of the benefits normally

associated with meeting the physical activity guidelines."

Eating too much?

Prof Marie Murphy, from the University of Ulster, who led the study, said:

"Housework is physical activity and any physical activity should theoretically

increase the amount of calories expended.

"But we found that housework was inversely related to leanness, which suggests

that either people are overestimating the amount of moderate intensity physical

activity they do through housework, or are eating too much to compensate for

the amount of activity undertaken."

She added: "When talking to people about the amount of physical activity they

need to stay healthy, it needs to be made clear that housework may not be

intense enough to contribute to the weekly target and that other more intense

activities also need to be included each week."

Chris Allen, senior cardiac nurse at the British Heart Foundation, said: "Your

exercise should make you breathe harder, feel warmer, and make your heart beat

faster than usual.

"So, unless your household chores tick all these boxes, they won't count.

"If you're daunted by the prospect of a 150-minute target, think of it in

10-minute chunks.

"It doesn't necessarily mean forking out for a gym membership either - try a

brisk walk on your lunch break or make a resolution to take the stairs rather

than the lift each morning."