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When you are living with health problems, regular exercise and activity are important. They keep you healthier, give you energy, make you stronger, and help your mood.
Exercise and activity can help many health problems. An active body is less likely to give in to diabetes, heart disease, lung disease, arthritis, depression, or weight gain. And being active can help protect you from new health problems.
What does "exercise" or "being active" mean? It all depends on what you can do.
It can be hard to be active when you have many health problems. Exercising enough to control diabetes can be a challenge when arthritis makes walking painful or when heart failure slows you down. But there are choices, like doing exercises in the water or as part of a cardiac rehab program.
With your doctor’s help, you can decide what works for you. Figure out what is safe, what to avoid, and what kinds of choices you have. Don't be too active or get too much exercise at first. Do a little at first, and then gradually do more.
Regular exercise:
You want to live life to its fullest, but you don't want to hurt yourself.
1. Know your strengths and your barriers. When you have more than one chronic disease, there may be some physical limits on what you can do. If you push your limits, you could hurt yourself. It’s also normal to have feelings that can get in the way, like fear or depression. These emotions and physical limits are called barriers.
2. Get expert advice. Talk to your doctor about all of your symptoms, medicines, and barriers to being active. Talk about your strengths and what you enjoy doing. If you've been feeling depressed, be sure to talk about that too. Depression can make even the simplest things seem hard.
Use this planning form(What is a PDF document?) to gather your thoughts. What do you most like to do? What kinds of things get in your way? What questions do you have for your doctor?
Go over your planning form with your doctor. Write down what you can do for exercise and what you need to be careful about. Set a long-term goal you can reach, and start with small steps toward it. When you reach your goal, find a way to celebrate it. Then set another goal.
Your doctor may work with you on an exercise prescription. This clearly sets out what is safe for you, such as your target heart rate range and any need for medical supervision while you exercise. If you need medical staff with you when you exercise, your doctor will suggest that you sign up for an exercise rehab program.
3. Know when to stop and when to call your doctor. When you exercise, it's normal to have some minor muscle and joint soreness. But other signs may point to something more serious. Stop exercising if:
Your doctor may add other symptoms to look out for, based on your health.
Call your doctor if your symptoms don't go away quickly or if they come back again.
Be as active as you can as often as you can, but honor your body’s limits.
Health experts suggest that older adults and people with long-term health problems try to:
These are guidelines. A slow walk might feel hard, easy, or somewhere in between for you, depending on your health and fitness levels. You and your doctor can decide what’s best for you.
| By | Healthwise Staff |
|---|---|
| Primary Medical Reviewer | Anne C. Poinier, MD - Internal Medicine |
| Specialist Medical Reviewer | Brian D. O'Brien, MD - Internal Medicine |
| Last Revised | August 3, 2011 |
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Related InformationLast Revised: August 3, 2011
Author: Healthwise Staff
Medical Review: Anne C. Poinier, MD - Internal Medicine & Brian D. O'Brien, MD - Internal Medicine
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