Weekend warriors — people who pack most of their physical activity into one or two days — may gain the same health-protective benefits as people who exercise throughout the week, as long as they get the recommended amount, new research finds.
The study found that regardless of whether people concentrated their 150 minutes of moderate to vigorous physical activity over a short period of time or stretched it out over the week, the risk fell for more than 200 diseases, with the strongest associations found among cardiometabolic conditions such as high blood pressure and diabetes.
The findings were published in the American Heart Association journal Circulation.
“The bottom line is that it’s really the total volume of physical activity, rather than the pattern, that matters,” said Dr. Shaan Khurshid, the study’s co-senior author and a cardiac electrophysiologist at Massachusetts General Hospital in Boston. “The important thing is that you get your recommended levels of physical activity. If one to two days a week works for you, you’re still going to get that benefit.”
Physical activity has been shown to reduce the risk of cardiovascular and other diseases. Federal physical activity guidelines recommend adults engage in at least 150 minutes of moderate-intensity physical activity or 75 minutes of vigorous-intensity physical activity each week, or a combination of both.
There’s little guidance, however, on how that activity should be spread throughout the week.
Researchers investigated whether so-called weekend warriors, who get most of their physical activity over a one- or two-day period and are largely inactive the rest of the week, would get the same health benefits as people who spread their 150 minutes of exercise throughout the week.
Using data from the UK Biobank, a large database containing genetic and medical information on volunteers in the United Kingdom, researchers analyzed physical activity levels and disease prevalence for 89,573 people who were an average 62 years old. Physical activity was measured using wrist-based accelerometers that participants wore for one week.