2015-03-27 12:48:40
By James Gallagher Health editor, BBC News website
Office workers need to get off their backsides and move around more, according to a new campaign.
On Your Feet Britain says sitting for long periods at work is linked to a host of health problems, which are not undone by working out in the gym.
It is calling on people to stand regularly, walk around more and embrace ideas such as standing meetings or standing desks.
Experts described inactivity as "one of the biggest" challenges in health.
Heart disease, type 2 diabetes, cancers and poor mental health have all been linked to sedentary behaviour.
The effect is found even in people who class themselves as fit, such as those who cycle to work, if they also spend long periods of time sitting.
Prolonged sitting is thought to slow the metabolism and affect the way the body controls sugar levels, blood pressure and the breakdown of fat.
The campaign is a partnership between the group Get Britain Standing and the British Heart Foundation (BHF) charity.
Their survey of 2,000 office workers suggested:
45% of women and 37% of men spend less than 30 minutes a day up on their feet at work
More than half regularly eat their lunch at their desk
78% office workers felt they spent too much time sitting down
Nearly two-thirds were worried sitting at work was having a negative impact on their health
Gavin Bradley, from Get Britain Standing, told the BBC News website: "We're all victims of our environment, we've taken a lot of activity out of the workplace and we're sitting longer and longer.
"We need new and innovative ways of addressing the issue.
"Stand up when you're on the phone or in meetings, do everything you can to avoid sitting."
Other ideas including using the stairs instead of a lift, eating lunch away from your desk, taking a break from your computer every 30 minutes and walking to a colleague's desk rather than phoning or emailing them.
Get Britain Standing says standing burns an extra 50 calories per hour than being seated.
Dr Mike Loosemore, head of exercise medicine at University College Hospital, told the BBC: "Inactivity and sedentary behaviour is one of the biggest challenges we have in public health today.
"Compared with 100 years ago, our levels of activity are tiny, the number of manual jobs are continually reducing, even if you dig a road up you sit in a little tractor.
"It's about changing attitudes to how people behave at work and changing the culture of the workplace that just means moving around at little bit more, even just standing up can make a big difference to calories burned and how alert, creative and productive you are."
Lisa Young, project manager for the BHF's Health at Work programme, said: "We're all guilty of being too glued to our screens sometimes, but these results show just how far the couch potato culture has infiltrated the workplace.
"Too many of us are tied to our desks at work, which could be increasing our risk of developing cardiovascular disease.
"That's why we want workers to get up and get moving on 24 April and take a stand against cardiovascular disease.
"A bit of healthy competition in the workplace could go a long way to reversing this trend whilst raising vital funds for our ground-breaking research."