BENEFITS OF SWIMMING
What are the benefits of swimming?
There are plenty of reasons to swim! Here's a list that should get you motivated.
Low impact
There's no ground impact when you swim, and so you protect the joints from stress and strain. In fact, the Arthritis
Foundation strongly recommends swimming and water activities for this
reason, so much so that they sponsor water classes all over the country. Water aerobics classes are also desirable for this
reason, because even if you do jump and hit the bottom of the pool, you
do so with less force because you're buoyant in the water. Not only
that, but if you wear or hold a flotation device during a water aerobics
class, the impact is even less.
Can be continued for a lifetime
Because there's no impact with swimming, it can be continued for a lifetime.
Builds cardiorespiratory fitness
Swimming
improves endurance. In one study of sedentary middle-aged men and women
who did swim training for 12 weeks, maximal oxygen consumption improved
10% and stroke volume (the amount of blood pumped with each beat which indicates heart strength) improved as much as 18%.
Builds muscle mass
In
a study of men who completed an eight-week swimming program, there was a
23.8% increase in the triceps muscle (the back of the arm). My take on
muscle mass and swimming is that if you have been doing no resistance
exercise at all and you start to swim, you will certainly get more toned
and you may even gain mass like the men in this study. But even without
the gain in mass, it's well worth the strength and tone that you will
almost certainly gain.
An alternative when injured
When
athletes are injured, particularly in the lower extremities, they are
frequently told to swim to maintain their fitness level. Swimming helps
them stay in shape, and it's even part of the rehabilitation. That's
because the resistance of the water makes the muscles work hard without
the strain or impact that is experienced on land.
It's a break from the summer heat
There's
nothing like it during the hot days of summer, whether it's at the
beach or in the pool. It's relaxing, the movements are smooth and
rhythmic, and it's a great workout.
It's a family affair
Swimming and other water activities are something the entire family can share. With rising levels of obesity
in children as well as adults in the Philippines, family physical
activities and good role-modeling may be one way to stem the epidemic of
inactivity and obesity facing our nation.
Burns calories
Swimming
burns lots of calories, anywhere from 500-650 per hour depending on how
efficiently you swim (you burn more flopping around than swimming
cleanly!) and how buoyant you are (the more body fat you have, the more
you float and the fewer calories it takes to swim). Very early and
original research on swimming and calorie expenditure showed that
swimming, regardless of the stroke, burned about 89% of the calories
burned during running and 97% of the calories burned during cycling
for the same time period. Stated another way, swimming burns about 11%
fewer calories than running but only 3% fewer calories than biking. One
important caveat about this data is that calorie expenditure is
dependent on the intensity of exercise, and so it's entirely possible to
burn more calories swimming than running in the same period of time as
long as you swim hard enough, and particularly so if compared to running
at light intensity.
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