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Is Sitting A Lethal Weapon? The Truth About Our 90 Degree Life
Dec 10, 2013
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Technology has become a fundamental part of our everyday lives. Many of us spend more hours in front of screens than we spend eating, sleeping, and exercising combined each day. Our lives have become more sedentary than ever before.
This abundance of sitting behaviour is having a negative impact on our health.
The average Canadian adult spends 50 to 70 per cent of their daily lives in a seated position and another 30 per cent sleeping. Whether at our desks, in our cars, or on the couch, we sit more than we don’t.
We know that physical activity is known to help reduce more than 25 chronic conditions such as:
Coronary heart disease
Stroke
Hypertension
Breast and colon cancer
Type 2 diabetes
Osteoporosis
It also helps achieve and maintain a healthy weight, relieves stress, and improves self-esteem and energy levels.
We also know that those who sit for more than 6 hours a day are at a greater risk for many long term and short term health problems.
Activity matters to your heart and your brain. It’s not necessarily about running marathons, aggressive exercise programs, or sport activity. All that matters is that you’re moving. The bottom line is; you can’t be sedentary AND healthy.
So, what does this look like? (You might want to stand for this…)
4 ways to celebrate National Indigenous Peoples Day
In Canada, June is National Indigenous History Month, which honours the history, heritage and diversity of First Nations, Inuit and Métis people across the country. And June 21 is National Indigenous Peoples Day – a day of celebration to honour the contributions,…
Nova Scotia is home to many dedicated physicians who are working hard to improve health care for their patients and communities. This year, Doctors Nova Scotia recognized 10 physicians and one medical student for exemplary achievement. Pictured above, from left to right: Drs. Sepideh Behroozan, Kenneth Rockwood, Todd Dow, Paul…
Dr. Shelly McNeil is the new president of Doctors Nova Scotia
As a young adult, Dr. Shelly McNeil spent time as a medical volunteer in Zimbabwe and in Swaziland (now Eswatini). She saw firsthand the devastation that diseases like HIV, measles and meningitis can wreak on communities. “It’s then I knew I wanted to be a doctor and to learn more…