a team of mcmaster researchers who studied heart patients found that stair-climbing routines, whether vigorous or moderate, provide significant cardiovascular and muscular benefits.
the findings, published in closely related studies in the journals medicine & science in sports & exercise and frontiers, address the most frequently cited barriers to exercise: time, equipment and access to gym facilities.
“brief, vigorous stair-climbing and traditional moderate intensity exercise both changed fitness, which is a key predictor of mortality after a cardiac event,” says kinesiology professor maureen macdonald, one of the lead researchers on both studies.
“we’ve shown stair-climbing is a safe, efficient and feasible option for cardiac rehabilitation, which is particularly relevant during the pandemic when many people don’t have the option to exercise in a gym,” she says.
while it is widely known that exercise and lifestyle changes reduce the risk of secondary cardiovascular disease, statistics suggest less than a quarter of all cardiac patients adhere to fitness programs.
researchers worked closely with the cardiac health and rehabilitation centre at the hamilton general hospital to develop an exercise protocol that did not require specialized equipment or monitoring and could be easily performed outside a laboratory.