Obesity, Diabetes & Bone Health
Hypokinetic Disease
Cardiovascular Disease
Prescription of Exercise for Health
Exercise & Psychological well-being
100

Outline one preventative measure for osteoporosis. 

Weight training!

100

Define hypokinetic disease

Diseases associated with a lack of physical activity/exercise

100

Identify one blood vessel of the coronary circulation.

Left or right coronary artery, left anterior descending artery, or circumflex artery

100

Outline physical activity guidelines for the promotion of good health in adults

150 hours of physical activity per week, 2 days of strength training

100

Define the term mood

A state of emotional or arousal of varing durations

200

Outline one method for determining obesity

BMI, which is the Body Mass Index found through weight (kg)/height (m)^2 

200

Distinguish the term exercise

exercise: leisure-time physical activity, planned

200

List three risk factors of cardiovascular disease, at least one which is modifiable and one that is not

any of these three: cigarette smoking, high blood pressure (hypertension), high cholesterol and LDL-cholesterol, low HDL-cholesterol, diabetes, obesity, physical inactivity, age, gender, ethnicity, family history

200

Discuss barriers to physical activity

Lack of time, social influence, lack of energy, lack of willpower, fear of injury, lack of skill, lack of resources

200

Outline the effects of exercise on changing mood states

Exercise can help with fatigue, anxiety, depression, and anger

300

Outline the major health consequences for someone who is obese.

Cardiovascular Disease, Hypertension, Type II Diabetes, Osteoarthritis, Respiratory Problems, Some cancers such as bowel cancer, Visceral Fat (belly fat found deep within your abdominal cavity)

300

State two hypokinetic diseases

Coronary heart disease, hypertension, obesity, type 2 diabetes, and/or osteoporosis

300

How can physical activity especially increase risk for cardiovascular disease?

It is also a risk factor for high blood pressure, obesity, type 2 diabetes, and low HDL cholesterol

300

Outline two aims of exercise for individuals with a hypokinetic disease

Prevention/management of hypokinetic disease

300

Describe how exercise enhances psychological well-being

Distractions from daily routine, enhanced feeling of control, competency, positive social interactions, improved self-esteem

400

Discuss why an osteoporitic fracture could lead to mental health difficulties.

Isolation, hospital visits, lack of independence, fear of falling/experiencing another fracture

400

Explain the relationship between major societal changes and hypokinetic disease.

Decrease of physical activities due to overreliance on cars, easier to work from home, lower physical activity leads to hypokinetic disease

400

Outline atherosclerosis

Arteries become damaged and blocked by cholesterol and other materials, limits and can eventually block blood flow 

400

Explain the role of exercise in reducing the effects of anxiety and depression

If you exercise once, you will feel less anxious, if you give yourself harder and harder exercises without recovering, you will feel more anxious because of lack of improvement despite harder exercises. Exercise has been seen to alleviate symptoms of depression

500

Describe the principal differences with regard to type I and type II diabetes. Make specific reference to the role of diet, exercise and insulin in treatment

  • Type 1: destruction of the insulin-producing cells in the pancreas, requires insulin treatments for the rest of life

  • Type 2: insufficient creation of insulin, can be prevented through dieting/exercise 

500

Discuss how studies of different populations provide evidence of the link between physical activity and hypokinetic disease

studies show that bus conductors have a much lower prevalence of heart attacks (half as many) than bus drivers → they also climb hundreds of stairs a day, while bus drivers sit for the majority of their shift (explain how lowered physical activity led to higher occurrence of hypokinetic disease)

500

Discuss how routine physical inactivity can lead to cardiovascular disease

- physical activity is a risk factor for cardiovascular disease

- physical activity is also a risk factor for high blood pressure, obesity, type 2 diabetes, etc.

- having multiple risk factors compounds the risk of cardiovascular disease

500

Discuss physical health barriers to exercise for adults aged 65 and above

Lack of energy, fear of injury, lack of skill

500

Discuss potential personal and environmental barriers to physical activity

1) lack of time, 2) social influence, 3) lack of energy, 4) lack of willpower, 5) fear of injury, 6) lack of skill, and 7) lack of resource