By Harvey B. Simon, M.D.
Author of
The No Sweat Exercise Plan: Lose Weight,
Get Healthy, and Live Longer

Do it for a better body
and mind.
Do it for a longer and
healthier life.
Do it for yourself.
No stress. No strain. No
sweat.

Stair-climbing is the best-kept secret in exercise for health. It is a great
way to add CME points during the course of daily life, and it will help
improve your leg strength and balance as well as your heart and waistline.
By way of example, let
me tell you the story of Lewis Ripps. Lew is a trim seventy-two-year-old
businessman who runs six and a half miles a day along the hilly Berkshire
roads when he is at his Massachusetts vacation home. But he’s in
Massachusetts only for most summer and autumn weekends and for occasional
weekends during the rest of the year. At home in New Jersey, Lew doesn’t run
-- nor does he swim, bike, use exercise machines, or walk for health.
Mr. Ripps seems to be a
weekend warrior who is breaking all the rules. At any age, sporadic intense
exercise is a bad idea, and at age seventy-two, it’s an invitation for
disaster. But Lew is quite safe because he stays active the year round --
not through any formal exercise program, but by walking stairs. And he does
quite a lot of that; in fact, he averages eighteen long, steep flights a day
at the New Jersey manufacturing plant he manages.
Coaches, cardiologists,
and housewives have long been in on the secrets of stairs. Many football
coaches “ask” their players to charge up flight after flight of stadium
steps to get in shape, and other competitive athletes put gymnasium
stairwells to similar use. In the days before stress testing held sway,
doctors would often walk up stairs with patients to check their
cardiopulmonary function. Even today, cardiologists tell patients they are
fit enough to have sex if they can walk up two or three flights comfortably,
and surgeons may clear patients for lung operations if they can manage five
or six flights. As for housewives, taking care of a two- or three-story home
is one reason American women outlive their husbands by an average of 5.4
years.
What’s so special about
stairs? Researchers in Canada answered the question by monitoring seventeen
healthy male volunteers with an average age of sixty-four while they walked,
lifted weights, or climbed stairs. Stair-climbing was the most demanding. It
was twice as taxing as brisk walking on the level and 50 percent harder than
walking up a steep incline or lifting weights. And peak exertion was
attained much faster by climbing stairs than by walking, which is why nearly
everyone huffs and puffs going up stairs, at least until their second wind
kicks in after a few flights.
Because stairs are so
taxing, only the very young at heart should attempt to charge up long
flights. But at a slow, steady pace, stairs can be a health plus for the
rest of us. Begin modestly with a flight or two, and then escalate as you
improve. Take the stairs whenever you can; if you have a long way to go,
walk partway, and then switch to an elevator. Use the railing for balance
and security (especially going down), and don’t try the stairs after a heavy
meal or if you feel unwell.
Even at a slow pace,
you’ll earn CME points two to three times faster climbing stairs than
walking briskly on the level. The Harvard Alumni Study found that men who
average at least eight flights a day enjoy a 33%lower mortality rate
than men who are sedentary -- and that’s even better than the 22%
lower death rate men earned by walking 1.3 miles a day. That may be a bit
optimistic, but even if you don’t count on just eight flights a day to keep
you healthy, you should add stairs to your CME menu at every opportunity.
Want to stay well? Step
right up!