LIFESTYLE NEWS - We know that spending too much time sitting down is bad for our health. Now a study has found that people with desk-bound jobs have bigger waists and increased risk of heart disease.
This is according to research led by Dr William Tigbe from the University of Warwick.
Every hour spent at a desk
The new study suggests that waist circumference increases by two centimetres, and risk of cardiovascular diseases by 0.2%, for every additional hour of sitting on top of five hours.
Furthermore, bad cholesterol (LDL) increases and good cholesterol (HDL) decreases with each additional hour of sitting from five hours a day.
Comparing active jobs with desk jobs
Dr Tigbe kitted out 111 healthy Glaswegian postal workers with activity monitors for seven days - 55 were office workers and 56 delivered post for a living.
The study revealed that those who had desk jobs had a bigger waist circumference - 97 cm compared to 94 cm - and approximately one BMI unit difference. They also had a higher risk of cardiovascular disease - 2.2% compared to 1.6% over ten years.
"Longer time spent in sedentary posture is significantly associated with larger waist circumference, higher triglycerides (fat in the blood) and lower HDL cholesterol, all adding up to worse risk of heart disease,” says Dr Tigbe.