Everyone knows that exercise is
good for your health. It’s good for your physical health. It’s good for your
mental health. It’s one of the most beneficial things you can do for yourself.
And yet, it requires work. In a
culture that has taught people that there’s a pill for everything, exercise is
often shunted off to the side, an activity for those who are less cerebral and
thus less intelligent.
And, physicians do not profit
directly when their patients exercise. You might say that fitness centers do
and that Nike does, but the medical profession has very little vested financial
interest in exercise.
Worse yet, exercise competes with
treatments that earn more for doctors.
Everyone knows about exercise, but
the message does not seem to have a privileged messenger. Perhaps, Dr. Jordan
Metzl will be that messenger. As both a practicing physician—specializing in
sports medicine—and a trainer, Metzl treats patients and teaches exercise
classes.
The New York Times reports:
Dr. Metzl’s specialty is treating injuries without
surgery. His favorite medicine, he says, is exercise: It is one he takes often
and prescribes to all of his patients. He’s completed over 40 marathons and
Ironman competitions, and his goal is to do at least one Ironman every year.
Hopefully, Metzl’s training regimen does not make those who
prefer a few hours on the treadmill feel inadequate.
In the course of his Times interview Metzl discusses his
book, The Exercise Cure:
It
takes what I believe in personally and puts it in a scientific approach, namely
that exercise is medicine. I want people to learn how they can take exercise
for their problems, whether its memory issues, depression, anxiety, heart
disease or high cholesterol. How do you use exercise as a first line drug, and
how do you talk to your physician about that? Those are things I want people to
learn.
It’s a lot better than touting the transformative power of
Prozac, don’t you think.
1 comment:
Nothing happens until somebody sells something.
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