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Booming Health Clubs, Slipping Fitness Participation and Healthier Diets All Coexist in the Overweight Society.


Feature, Health & Lifestyle Editors

FEATURE...

HARTSDALE, N.Y.--(BUSINESS WIRE FEATURES)--Sept. 8, 2000

New Study Tracks History of the American Fitness Revolution

-- A Maze of Contradictions

True or False? "One of the most profound changes in American lifestyle and culture over the past 30 years has been the emergence of a fitness revolution." Answer: True, but not lately, according to according to
prep.
1. As stated or indicated by; on the authority of: according to historians.

2. In keeping with: according to instructions.

3.
 American Sports Data Sports data are typically published online and in newspapers as box scores. Box scores contain a numerical view of a sporting event and are of interest for sports betting and fantasy sports. While box scores contain a wealth of information (e.g. , Inc. which has tracked U.S. fitness trends since 1987. The fitness phenomenon peaked in 1990, and has remained on a plateau ever since, becoming an increasingly complex tangle of sub-trends which have obscured the overall direction and intensity of our collective physical fitness behavior.

According to ASD ASD
abbr.
atrial septal defect


ASD Atrial septal defect, see there
, the present-day fitness movement is a direct descendant of the 1960's counter-culture. Many of the embryonic attitudes and lifestyles conceived in that turbulent era and embraced by only a small minority of the population were to become mainstream American values in the 1970's. One of the most important trends to emerge from this period was a new focus on self-fulfillment and a heightened interest in self-improvement -- an outgrowth of which was a growing awareness of personal health and physical fitness.

This nascent nascent /nas·cent/ (nas´ent) (na´sent)
1. being born; just coming into existence.

2. just liberated from a chemical combination, and hence more reactive because uncombined.
 fitness consciousness grew slowly but steadily throughout the 1970's, achieving critical mass toward the end of that decade as the Running Boom -- spearhead of the revolution. This "original" fitness activity, the forerunner of a wider fitness movement, peaked during the early 1980's, but not before giving rise to a second generation of other strenuous activities, such as High-Impact Aerobics high-impact aerobics Sports medicine Aerobic exercise that stresses musculoskeletal tissues, joints HIA exercises Aerobic dancing, basketball, jogging, running. See Aerobic exercise, Exercise, Cf Low-impact aerobics. , Fitness Biking and Triathlons.

The late 1980's ushered in a third generation of potentially easier, less stressful low-impact exercise opportunities such as Fitness Walking, Soft Aerobics, Stationary Cycling and Treadmill exercise. These activities were less threatening and more user-friendly to a large, sedentary sedentary /sed·en·tary/ (sed´en-tar?e)
1. sitting habitually; of inactive habits.

2. pertaining to a sitting posture.


sedentary

of inactive habits; pertaining to a fat, castrated or confined animal.
 element of the population who may have been intimidated in·tim·i·date  
tr.v. in·tim·i·dat·ed, in·tim·i·dat·ing, in·tim·i·dates
1. To make timid; fill with fear.

2. To coerce or inhibit by or as if by threats.
 by earlier "hard-core" fitness trends. Consequently, this third wave of the fitness boom -- the overweight, unathletic, (and, in many cases, older) segments of the population -- was the real revolution, because it made fitness available to everyone.

By 1990, 51.5 million Americans over the age of six or 23.2% of the population participated in at least one individual physical fitness activity on 100 or more occasions. But by 1997, the incidence of frequent exercise in the U.S. had declined to 21.8%. In 1999, there were still 50.4 million frequent exercise participants, although a growing population pushed the participation rate down even further to 20.5%. By contrast, membership at health clubs jumped from 20.7 million in 1990 to 30.6 million in 1999, an increase of 48%. Even more ironically, the number of people who worked out frequently at clubs (100+ days) per year, soared by 84% during the same period. This was just one paradox found in a Tracking Study of Physical Fitness Behavior in the U.S. (1987 - 1999) released in July 2000 by ASD.

Other health and lifestyle indicators offer little illumination. Against the backdrop of a thriving health club business, robust sales of home exercise equipment, and a general (albeit declining) enthusiasm for exercise, looms the incongruous in·con·gru·ous  
adj.
1. Lacking in harmony; incompatible: a joke that was incongruous with polite conversation.

2.
 portrait of a seriously overweight nation.

A 1998 consumer study by ASD found that 59% of all adults 18+ considered themselves overweight. The 1998 Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance System The Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance System (BRFSS) is a United States national health survey that looks at behavioral risk factors. It is run by Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and conducted by the individual states.  conducted by the Centers for Disease Control pegged the figure at 54% -- based on calculated body mass index. Even more disturbing was the CDC See Control Data, century date change and Back Orifice.

CDC - Control Data Corporation
 finding that 18% of all American adults are not only overweight, but obese o·bese
adj.
Extremely fat; very overweight.



obese

characterized by obesity.

obese adjective Characterized by obesity, see there; excessively fat
 -- up from 11% in 1991. In the ASD study, 14% perceived themselves as "considerably overweight".

But in the face of this obesity epidemic, Americans are making some effort to improve their eating habits. The average percentage of our calories derived from fat has declined, vitamin consumption is ascendant, and we enjoy an unprecedented smorgasbord of low-calorie, fat-free, "light", sodium-free foods, not to mention liquid diets, high-fiber products and special health foods. On the other hand, our total caloric caloric /ca·lo·ric/ (kah-lor´ik) pertaining to heat or to calories.

ca·lor·ic
adj.
1. Of or relating to calories.

2. Of or relating to heat.
 consumption is on the rise, nullifying many of these potential benefits.

There is however, one reconciling factor: overweight people can be quite active. Quite simply, the overweight population -- barring those classified as obese -- boasts a surprisingly high percentage of sports/fitness participants. Whereas 59% of the population perceives itself to be "a little" or "considerably" overweight, the overweight percentage for very active people reaches 51%. But those who deem themselves "considerably" overweight have a much lower participation rate than their slightly overweight or "normal" counterparts.

The paradox of a fitness-conscious society that doesn't look the part is best explained by the great gulf between consumer attitudes and actual behavior. According to ASD president Harvey Lauer, "The Master Trend of physical fitness in the 1990's was bound to be misinterpreted because it was both complicated and counterintuitive coun·ter·in·tu·i·tive  
adj.
Contrary to what intuition or common sense would indicate: "Scientists made clear what may at first seem counterintuitive, that the capacity to be pleasant toward a fellow creature is ...
. But most of the contradictions can be resolved in just two words: good intentions and good marketing. One of our cardinal statistics is that 62% of the U.S. population acknowledges the benefits of exercise, knows it should exercise more, but never does. Health clubs and equipment manufacturers have been phenomenally successful because American attitudes have already changed. But permanent behavior is another story. Annual health club turnover rates hover An option in Microsoft Internet Explorer that removes the permanent underline from hypertext links. The underline displays automatically and only when the cursor is placed over (hovers over) the link. Hover is available in Tools/Internet Options/Advanced/Underline links.  around 30% - 40%, and we all know the industry joke about how long it takes for a piece of exercise equipment to become a clotheshorse! Let's not Let's Not is a science fiction short story by Isaac Asimov. It was first published in Boston University Graduate Journal in December 1954. It was written for no payment as a favour to the journal, and later appeared in the collection Buy Jupiter.  forget what we're up against here. We're trying to persuade people to defy the Pleasure Principle -- to do something painful, inconvenient, time-consuming, or all three. The big prize will go to the product, system or concept that unlocks this motivational secret."

For more statistical information please contact Harvey Lauer at 914/328-8877.
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Publication:Business Wire
Date:Sep 8, 2000
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