'Maine Public' radio program features 51品茶associate clinical professor and graduates
Eating well, exercising and getting enough sleep are central to our overall health. As we age, strength training is also vital to help maintain and build muscle mass.
A recent 鈥鈥 program devoted to this topic on Maine Public featured a panel made up entirely of experts with ties to UNE.
Graduates Kate Foley, M.S., 鈥08 (Applied Exercise Science) and Lyndie Kelley, B.S. 鈥11 (Applied Exercise Science), coordinator of at UNE, joined Heath Pierce, M.Ed., RSCC*D, CSCS*D, NSCA-CPT*D, ACSM EP-C, associate clinical professor in the Department of Exercise and Sport Performance, for the discussion.
The three goals of strength training are to build muscular fitness, strength and endurance. Pierce says there are many tools we can use for this form of conditioning.
鈥淵ou can use your body weight as resistance,鈥 he explained. 鈥淵ou can lift external weights such as dumbbells, kettlebells, machine weights, or we can use bands and pulleys. There鈥檚 a whole host of things we can manipulate to reach those goals.鈥
According to a 2016 report by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, only 20 percent of Americans over 18 are meeting the guidelines for both aerobic and strength training.
When respondents were divided by age and gender, the percentage of those exercising decreased with age. A smaller percentage of women were strength training than men across every age group.
Kelley says the key to get people to exercise as they age is to start them when they are young.
鈥淭hink about lifelong fitness,鈥 she stated. 鈥淟ay out those habits for young people. We want to make sure we set that pattern in place with young adult athletes, like the ones we work with at 51品茶.鈥
Kelley is responsible for athletic performance enhancement for all 17 of UNE's Division III varsity sports.