Amish paradox: Simpler, active lifestyles help keep the weight off
Jeannine Stein
Los Angeles Times
Forget the standard-issue health and fitness resolutions that
include joining a gym, going to yoga, and trading meatball subs for
white-meat turkey.
It may just be that the best way to get in shape is to plow the back 40, toss a few bales of hay, and wash buckets of wet clothes by hand.
Call it the Amish paradox. An exercise science professor has
discovered that a pocket of Old Order Amish folks in Ontario,
Canada, has stunningly low obesity levels, despite a diet high in
fat, calories, and refined sugar -- exactly the stuff doctors tell us
not to eat.
They're at a 4 percent obesity rate, compared with 31 percent in
the general U.S. population, which, as we all know, is getting
fatter by the minute. This group of Amish manages to keep its
overweight levels low despite a diet that includes meat, potatoes,
gravy, cakes, pies, and eggs.
So what's their secret? Exercise, people. Exercise.
For starters, of the 98 Amish pedometer-wearing adults surveyed
over a week, men averaged about 18,000 steps a day, women about
14,000. Most Americans do not come anywhere close to that,
struggling to get in the recommended 10,000 steps a day.
Amish men spent about 10 hours a week doing vigorous activities,
women about 3 1/2 hours (heavy lifting, shoveling, or digging,
shoeing horses, tossing straw bales). Men averaged 43 hours of
moderate activity a week, women about 39 hours (gardening, feeding
farm animals, doing laundry). We feel virtuous if we manage to eke
out half an hour a day on the StairMaster.
We know, of course, that the Industrial Revolution caused us to
evolve from an agrarian society to a techno world. But these
statistics show just how far we've fallen from a naturally active
lifestyle to one in which eight hours of work is often spent sitting
in front of a computer -- and what little leisure time we have is
frittered away eating cheese curls while watching "The Bachelor."
Lead researcher David R. Bassett Jr., professor of exercise
science at the University of Tennessee, conducted the study to look
at changes in physical activity from a historical perspective. His
findings were published in this month's Medicine & Science in Sports
& Exercise, a journal of the American College of Sports Medicine.
He chose this population of Amish for their adherence to a
physically demanding farming lifestyle and rejection of things
technical, such as automobiles and electricity. They are something
of an artifact of how we lived 150 years ago.
Higher rates of obesity exist in other North American Amish
communities that have moved away from farming and segued into less
strenuous occupations such as woodworking and quilting, according to
the study.
Amish men in Holmes County, Ohio, for example, had rates
of obesity similar to non-Amish men; Amish women actually had higher
rates, attributed to multiple pregnancies, diet, and greater
acceptance of overweight physiques.
The findings of the Old Order Amish, Bassett believes, serve to
put our slothful lives in perspective.
"It can provide a sense of what we ought to be doing," he says. "It's a little ridiculous -- we drive to work, then go to the gym to walk on a treadmill. We go to great lengths to remove activity from our daily lives, and then we go to great lengths to put it back in. The Amish have done a better
job than anybody of consciously thinking what impact technology will have on their lives."
This dichotomy between overweight Americans and trim Amish shows
that our genes haven't caught up to our diets and ways of living,
according to Dr. David Heber, director of the UCLA Center for Human
Nutrition.
"Our genes are perfectly adapted to another lifestyle, because you need those fat calories to plow the back 40," he says. "I exercise an hour every day, but I can't eat whatever I want."
It's not just the exercise that separates us from the Amish.
Heber points out that their meals, for instance, don't consist of
leftover pizza eaten while standing up and talking on the phone.
Bassett says the meals he ate with the Amish consisted of stick-
to-your-ribs foods such as pancakes, eggs, ham, cake, and milk, but
also fresh fruits and vegetables at almost every noon and evening
meal. Snacking is practically non-existent. The Amish do sometimes
eat at fast-food restaurants when traveling.
Among Americans, according to the Center for Nutrition Policy and
Promotion, in 2000 only 28 percent were meeting the suggested daily
requirements for vegetables (three to five servings a day), and just
17 percent for fruits (two to four servings a day).
Amish communities are small and structured to encourage walking,
unlike today's sprawling cities and towns that require cars or mass
transit.
Judith Stern, vice president of the Washington, D.C.-based
American Obesity Association, says the modern world is designed to
make us more efficient, meaning we move less and get fatter.
"We're not trying to re-create the Amish lifestyle," she says,
"but how do we create an environment in which people are more active
spontaneously? We often don't have sidewalks in the suburbs. If you
want to walk the stairs in a building, they're usually dark and
uninviting."
And then there's the frustrating conundrum of leisure time.
Remember how technological advances such as computers were supposed
to give us lots of it? Between commuting to work and ferrying the
kids to school and play dates, there seems to be little of it,
despite the fact that we don't have to grow our own food or chop
wood.
And when we do get a few minutes of downtime, says Heber, we
often spend it surfing the Internet instead of the ocean.
"It always amazes me," he adds, "that we don't have an hour to
exercise, but we do watch an average of four hours of TV a day."
Though the Amish choose to exist largely apart from the rest of
the population, they are not unaware of how the other 99.9 percent
lives. Even their infrequent indulgence in fast food is being
examined.
Bassett recalls reading a story in an Amish community newsletter
that questioned the practice: "One of their bishops outlined the
reasons why the fast-food industry is not really consistent with
Amish beliefs, because everything is rush, rush, rush."
Bassett remembers a comment from an Amish man who said that when
venturing into town, he can't help noticing the number of overweight
people. Says Bassett, "The man said, 'Maybe they have it a little
too easy.' They've definitely noticed the same things we have, only
from a different perspective."