How to Fit in Fitness During Physical Distancing
Improve cardio and strength from home with these suggestions
Around 1:30 p.m. each workday, Manda Cox steps onto her 鈥渕obile office鈥 鈥 a treadmill at home.
For the next two hours, she works, logging about 7,000 steps while handling email and other business from a laptop perched in front of her.
鈥淲hen my feet are moving, my mind is moving,鈥 said Cox, a financial analyst for Duke Health System鈥檚 General Accounting & Financial Reporting.
With regular workout routines disrupted and gyms closed due to physical distancing during the COVID-19 outbreak, many Duke colleagues are finding alternative ways to fit in fitness.
The 鈥溾 by the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services says adults need at least 150 to 300 minutes a week of moderate-intensity aerobic activity. Adults also need muscle-strengthening activities, such as weights or push-ups, at least two days each week.
鈥淧hysical activity is essential to improving your emotional and physical health,鈥 said Nick Beresic, health promotions manager for LIVE FOR LIFE, Duke鈥檚 employee wellness program. 鈥淓xercising is an opportunity to step away from the news, get some fresh air and stretch your body after a long day.鈥
Here鈥檚 how to fit in fitness.
Make a fitness plan
With yoga classes canceled, Melissa Wilson scheduled a remote with LIVE FOR LIFE, which provides consultations to employees at no charge. Wilson talked with Claire Beeson, a fitness specialist for LIVE FOR LIFE, over the phone to develop a plan that includes yoga sessions and walking 7,000 steps a day.
鈥淚鈥檝e had personal trainers in the past, and that鈥檚 expensive,鈥 said Wilson, a clinical nurse educator for Duke Raleigh Hospital. 鈥淏eing able to talk with someone for free to figure out how I should be working out is amazing.鈥
Benefits-eligible employees can meet with a Duke fitness specialist two times a year at no charge. The consultation can be a 30-minute session over the phone.
Fitness consultations focus on small, realistic changes that fit your lifestyle and provide guidance for muscular strength, cardiovascular fitness, weight maintenance, stretching and more.
鈥淔itness consultations provide a workout format so you don鈥檛 have to wonder if you鈥檙e doing the right exercise,鈥 Beeson said. 鈥淲e can help find the perfect balance, so you鈥檙e not overworking or underworking your body.鈥
Get your heart rate up with cardio
Your heart rate is a clue to discover how hard you鈥檙e exercising. The more intense your workout, the higher your rate, which helps burn calories and body fat.
Kara Bonneau, director of the North Carolina Education Data Center at the Duke Center for Child and Family Policy, either runs or bikes daily for an average of 90 minutes as part of her training for the 鈥淚ronman Western Australia鈥 on Dec. 6. During the event, she鈥檒l swim 2.4 miles, bike 112 miles and run 26.2 miles.
鈥淐ardio has been important for me because it鈥檚 been something that鈥檚 remained normal for me during this time,鈥 Bonneau said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 a way to get out of my house and do something positive for myself.鈥
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention recommends 150 minutes of moderate to intense aerobic activity each week either through walking or biking; 75 minutes of vigorous aerobic activity such as running and playing tennis; or a combination of the two levels of activity. The activity can be spread out during a week any way you like.
Learn how to measure your heart rate on
No equipment required
Building muscle doesn鈥檛 take weights, a workout bench or expensive equipment. All you need is your body weight.
Michelle Mosberger, exercise physiologist and lifestyle counselor for the Duke Health & Fitness Center, said bodyweight exercises strengthen muscles, improve body compensation and increase flexibility.
She suggests a workout including versions of push-ups, squats, backward and/or side lunges, mountain climbers, planks, glute bridges and side-lying leg lifts. The general recommendation for strength training is two to three times a week of one to four sets of the exercises with eight to 15 repetitions of each exercise per set.
鈥淓ven though you don鈥檛 have access to what you normally do, you can get a lot of exercises done at home,鈥 Mosberger said. 鈥淥ur bodies are basically free workout tools.鈥
During a typical semester, Duke Softball Head Coach Marissa Young challenges her team to compete in a series of fitness challenges. The coaches and students see who can record the most push-ups, hold the longest pull-up and do the longest wall sit. For wall sits at home, Young recommends doing three sets of the exercise for 45 to 60 seconds each.
Now, with the softball season canceled, Young completes a daily workout with her husband and four children: Tabata. A Tabata workout can include burpees, push-ups, squats, mountain climbers and lunges. Each exercise generally lasts four minutes, and you do eight repetitions of each exercise in a row.
鈥淣o equipment workouts make it easy to find a consistent time each day to do your workout,鈥 Young said. 鈥淵ou don鈥檛 have to worry about traveling anywhere or gathering up equipment. It鈥檚 a matter of training your body to recognize that it鈥檚 time to get moving.鈥
For more workout ideas, visit Duke Recreation & Physical Education鈥檚 free of exercise routines.
Stretch and walk frequently
Jeff Wright gets up from working every 30 to 45 minutes to stretch, take a walk around his house, get water or climb stairs.
鈥淚鈥檓 no longer having meetings around campus or getting up to talk to colleagues,鈥 said Wright, computer facilities manager for Duke Computer Science. 鈥淓verything is being done at my desk. It鈥檚 become much more of a focused effort to get up and move.鈥
Taking mini breaks to stretch and walk was among Nick Beresic鈥檚 recommendations during a recent webinar on 鈥淔itting in Fitness.鈥 He recommends moving and stretching every 30 minutes to prevent aches and stiffness.
鈥淥ur body doesn鈥檛 respond well to sitting in front of a computer all day,鈥 Beresic said. 鈥淭aking mini-breaks gives our eyes a rest, stretches out our body and gives our brain time to recharge.鈥
VIDEO: Incorporate these strength exercises into your workout:
Help us share the proactive and extensive work being done by all Duke community members. Please share ideas, shout-outs and photographs with us or write us at working@duke.edu.