Notes
Movement Breaks
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If sitting is the exposure, the cheapest antidote is not a gym membership but a timer. "Movement breaks" — sometimes called activity snacks — mean interrupting long stretches of sitting with brief, light activity: a two-minute walk to refill a glass, a lap of the office, a short flight of stairs. The acute physiological evidence for them is among the most consistent in this whole field.
Interrupt the sitting, blunt the spike
In a controlled crossover trial, interrupting five hours of sitting with just two minutes of light walking every twenty minutes lowered the post-meal blood-sugar rise by about a quarter, and the insulin response by a similar amount, compared with sitting unbroken. Tellingly, a gentle stroll worked about as well as a brisker one — the bar to clear is low. Observational data point the same way: people who take more frequent breaks in their sitting have slimmer waists and better blood-fat and glucose readings, independent of how much they exercise.
Walk, don't just stand
Standing up helps, but walking helps more. A 2022 pooling of the trials found that short light-walking breaks cut the post-meal glucose rise by roughly 17%, while merely standing managed about half that and did nothing measurable for insulin. The practical instruction that falls out of the data is specific: every twenty to thirty minutes, get up and move — actually move — for a couple of minutes.
Sit less, move more
This is the spirit of the World Health Organization's 2020 guidance, which for the first time told adults plainly to limit sedentary time and replace it with activity of any intensity — "every move counts" — while dropping the old rule that a bout had to last ten minutes to count. The caution worth keeping: the short-term effects on glucose and insulin are well established, but proof that breaking up sitting changes long-term weight or hard health outcomes is still thinner. The breaks are a floor, not a replacement for the weekly 150 to 300 minutes of activity the guidelines still ask for.
Related concepts
Non-Exercise Activity Thermogenesis (NEAT)
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- Updated:
- 2026-06-28