HOPE: Health Optimizing Physical Education
HOPE: Health Optimizing Physical Education
HOPE: Health Optimizing Physical Education
Physical Education
Learning Objectives
To encourage students to be
physically active
To illustrate Exercise and its
effect on disease prevention
To provide examples of simple,
moderate intensity physical
activity
To encourage regular physical
activity in developing countries
with focus on women
To encourage physical fitness in
people with disabilities
To build an Olympic Physical
activity and health supercourse
What is Physical Activity
Physical activity
Bodily movement produced by skeletal
muscles that results in an expenditure of
energy
Physical fitness
A measure of a person's ability to perform
physical activities that require endurance,
strength, or flexibility.
Regular physical activity
A pattern of physical activity is regular if
activities are performed in some order
CDC,1997
Physical activity is something you do.
Physical fitness is something you
acquire, a characteristic or an attribute
one can achieve by being physically
active. And exercise is structured and
tends to have fitness as its goal"
Anonymous
Spectrum of Physical Activity
and Health
Physically Fit
Physically
Physically Active
disabled
2
1.8
1.6
1.4
1.2
1 Fit
0.8
Unfit
0.6
0.4
0.2
0
lean Normal Obese
<16% 16-24% >24%
Do you know that
Childhood obesity has reached epidemic
proportions in most part of the world
Children are eating more and exercising less.
Time spent watching television or using
computers
This lack coupled with poor dietary habits has
led to significant increases in the number of
children with Type II diabetes and
predisposition to hypertension, coronary artery
disease and others
All of these can be Prevented by
Regular Physical Activity !!!
How Physical Activity Impacts Health
Helps control weight.
Reduces feelings of depression and
anxiety.
Helps build and maintain healthy bones,
muscles, and joints.
Reduces the risk of developing colon
cancer.
Helps reduce blood pressure in people
who already have high blood pressure.
Causes the development of new blood
vessels in the heart and other muscles.
Enlarges the arteries that supply blood to
the heart. WHO 2002
Health Risk of Physical Inactivity
Leading causes of disease and disability
associated with physical inactivity
1. Coronary Heart Disease (CHD)
2. Stroke
3. Obesity
4. Type II Diabetes
5. Hypertension
6. Colorectal cancer
7. Stress and Anxiety
8. Osteo-arthritis
9. Osteoporosis
10.Low back pain
What Can Exercise do for You?
Reduce the risk of the three leading causes of
death: Heart Disease, stroke, and cancer
Control or prevent development of Disease
Levels
The Basics
Exercise helps to prevent obesity, a
major risk factor for several types
of cancer
Exercise enhances immune
function
Exercise activates antioxidant
enzymes that protect cells from
free radical damage
WHO 2002
Exercise and Diabetes
Increase insulin sensitivity
WHO 2002
Exercise and Depression
Exercise can help prevent depression.
In fact, recent studies have shown that
exercise was found to be just as
effective (despite a slower initial
response) as antidepressant medication
for treatment of depression.
Exercise reduces health problems , making
you feel better
Exercise helps you sleep better
Exercise controls weight, enhancing self-
esteem
WHO 2002
Exercise and Your Mind
Short-term benefits:
Boost alertness (possibly by triggering the
release of epinephrine and nor
epinephrine)
Improve memory
Improve intellectual function
Spark creativity
Long-term benefits:
Exercise has been shown to slow and even
reverse age-related decline in mental
function and loss of short-term memory
Components of an exercise
program
Aerobic Activity
Strength Training
Flexibility Training
CDC 1997
Health Risks of Physical Activity
Most musculo-skeletal injuries sustained
during physical activity are likely to be
preventable