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Old 06-Oct-05, 10:35 PM   #1
Jaster
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Firefighter Fitness


Firefighter Fitness
Why Playing Sports Can't Get You in Shape
Firehouse Magazine, Pg 60
By JOHN HAYFORD, M.S.

John Hayford, M.S., is an exercise physiologist and director of public safety and wellness at the National Hospital Medical Centre in Arlington, VA. He has conducted health care and fitness programs for a number of fire departments and law enforcement agencies.

There is no question that substantial levels of physical fitness are required for firefighting and rescue work. A recent review of the available scientific literature on firefighting job performance concluded that without a moderately high level of physical fitness, firefighters cannot perform their jobs safely or well. The bottom line is that a low level of fitness jeopardizes the safety of not only the individual but also his or her co-workers and the public.

Many firefighters and rescue workers follow a regular exercise and conditioning program. Some public safety employees are allotted time while on duty for physical conditioning, while others exercise on their own. Making time for regular physical training is analogous to the time spent maintaining your rescue tools, vehicles and equipment but in this case you’re working on your most important piece of firefighting and rescue equipment - your body. Time set aside for this purpose can accomplish many things, provided it’s used productively.

An effective cardiovascular exercise session takes from 30 to 45 minutes, including warm-up and cool-down. Flexibility exercises (stretching) shouldn’t take much more than 15 minutes, and a good strength training routine can be completed in about an hour. Certainly, these exercises don’t need to be done all at one time but can be spread out over the day.

If a person dedicates himself or herself to a regular program of effective physical conditioning, not only will the level of fitness progressively improve, but the risk of injury greatly decreases. Flexible, strong muscles protect your joints and are able to withstand high stresses. A well-conditioned cardiovascular system reduces the chance of experiencing exhaustion during prolonged exertion. This is important because injuries usually occur when people become fatigued. Thus, fit people have fewer and less severe injuries, and typical job tasks are much easier for them.

A significant number of public safety workers in the United States and Canada, however, don’t use their physical conditioning time effectively. Some squander it, avoiding exercise whenever possible. Some rely on the activity habits of their co-workers or shift leaders to determine what they do for themselves. Still others spend their entire “physical conditioning” time playing recreational sports such as basketball, volleyball or softball. For people who rely on recreational sports as their “training,” there is a high rate of injury, and this is no coincidence. And then there are those who perform only aerobic exercise (like jogging) while neglecting to do any stretching or strength training. Again, injuries in this group are common.

Physical training is very specific, and your body responds to it in very specific ways. Training only accomplishes its goal if you do it correctly. For example, if you want to increase or maintain muscle flexibility, you must regularly stretch a muscle to the point where mild tension is developed, and then hold still in that position for a minimum of 30 seconds. Without this “static stretching” performed on a regular basis, muscles will gradually become tighter. Similarly, if you want to increase or maintain muscle strength, specific muscle contractions with fairly heavy loads are the only way to accomplish this. Otherwise, strength is progressively lost as time goes by. If you want to increase or maintain your level of cardiovascular fitness, regular aerobic exercise that is sustained for at least 20 minutes is all that will achieve this goal. Without it, your cardiovascular system gets more and more “out of shape” and your ability to withstand long periods of exertion will diminish.

Basketball, volleyball, softball and other sports are games, designed only for fun and competition. They are not useful for increasing or maintaining physical fitness. During these activities, no static stretching occurs, so they can’t improve your flexibility. Powerful muscle contractions against fairly heavy resistance are virtually absent, so there is little strength training accomplished. Finally, sports are rather ineffective forms of cardiovascular exercise because your physical activity is not maintained steadily throughout the game. Instead, things fluctuate from brief periods of high intensity down to no activity at all when the ball goes out of bounds, is passed to another player or when a time-out occurs. To derive the same cardiovascular benefit from 30 minutes of sustained jogging, biking or swimming you’d have to play several hours of these sports.

A person whose only exercise is jogging may be doing a lot of good for his or her cardiovascular system but that’s about all. No stretching or strengthening is involved in jogging, so even though the heart and blood vessels may be in good shape, skeletal muscles are growing progressively tighter and weaker.

In any weight-bearing activity, muscles provide the shock absorption. Strong, flexible muscles absorb shock well and protect your joints. Weak or tight muscles are poor shock absorbers, so the forces are transferred to the knees, hips, back, etc.

It's no surprise that injuries experienced by recreational athletes are almost always due to being out of shape, or “de-conditioned.” When de-conditioned people try to play strenuous games, they are playing with weak muscles, tight muscles and/or an unfit cardiovascular system. No wonder they get injured! Add to this someone who may be carrying extra weight, and injuries are practically guaranteed. The more you weigh, the more impact there is with each step.

Another prime reason for injury is over-aggressiveness. For whatever reason, many people seize upon “fun and recreational” games as an opportunity to demonstrate their athletic prowess . . . And end up hurting somebody needlessly. Playing sports can’t get you in shape. You must get in shape before you play sports. That’s why regular stretching, strength conditioning and aerobic exercise are known as “training.” Merely playing a sport is a poor excuse for “physical conditioning,” and using sports in place of real training would be difficult to justify in light of the number of injuries that occur. Playing a sport is not an effective or optimum use of your training time. It has little positive effect on your flexibility and strength, and requires too much time involvement to improve your cardio-vascular system. All that playing a sport can do is to improve your skills at that particular game, plus burn up a few calories in the process. But in a profession where physical fitness has a direct impact on your job performance, it is vital to bear these points in mind when approaching your next workout. A physical conditioning program is just like anything else: You get out of it what you put into it. If the time is used productively, you stand to benefit a great deal.
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Old 06-Oct-05, 10:56 PM   #2
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Interesting read Jaster. I've been trying to convince our county manager and EMS director of the need to implement a physical training program or at least provide equipment to use for physical training at our EMS agency. They won't do it because they don't want the liability. So they just keep paying the workers comp claims for the old fat people who keep injuring their backs.

Granted the one that slipped in the cow sh*t last year and got a back injury was probably unavoidable. Although I think she would have been hurt less if she had been in shape. But the other back injuries from lifting patients would simply go away if people could squat and deadlift at least enough weight to handle their end of the stretcher.

But since I'm the only one interested in eating right, lifting, getting cardiovascular activity - I'm just "that weirdo who eats odd stuff and works out".
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Old 06-Oct-05, 11:13 PM   #3
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Yeah funny how they don't want "the liability"
When in fact there is more likely less of the chance of getting hurt if you train the right way. I'm glad that my Dept believes in us working to keep fit for our job. In fact I tell all our young firefighters "When you become a Firefighter you become a servent to the public. You are expected to keep a certin level of fitness to proform you duty. By swearing into this job you have now given up you right to become sloppy fat. Deal with it." I then set up a work for them and get them on their way!
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Old 07-Oct-05, 12:36 AM   #4
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I just wonder where the liability is going to go when there is a rescue operation over an embankment or way back in the mountains and they can't get the patient out because they are too old and fat to do it.

As we've all seen in the "extended fitness" pics section here that older doesn't have to mean out of shape.

We did have a couple of younger ones who were interested in fitness, but they have left to go to big city departments where they can actually make more money. Who can blame them, young - single - no family to keep in a small town to have good safe schools.
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Old 10-Oct-05, 05:04 AM   #5
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Jaster
sports are rather ineffective forms of cardiovascular exercise because your physical activity is not maintained steadily throughout the game. Instead, things fluctuate from brief periods of high intensity down to no activity at all when the ball goes out of bounds, is passed to another player or when a time-out occurs. To derive the same cardiovascular benefit from 30 minutes of sustained jogging, biking or swimming you’d have to play several hours of these sports.
not sure I buy that completely - this doesnt sound too dissimilar from fartlek or hiit to me - that coupled with what I hear in the media about "match fitness", with reference to football (soccer, if you must) suggests there is indeed a cardiovascular benefit to sports.
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Old 10-Oct-05, 07:06 AM   #6
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Quote:
Originally Posted by adrian
not sure I buy that completely - this doesnt sound too dissimilar from fartlek or hiit to me - that coupled with what I hear in the media about "match fitness", with reference to football (soccer, if you must) suggests there is indeed a cardiovascular benefit to sports.
Well I did not write the story I was just passing it on.
I do agree that American Football and Baseball do not bring a high amout of cardio most of the time. I mean most baseball games are a step up from bowling and you could almost catch up on some nap time in the middle of a game. LOL
I do think games like Soccer and basket ball bring a lot to the cardio table.:
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Old 10-Oct-05, 08:44 AM   #7
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Hah, that's for sure. I remember in HS making fun of the soccer players. The old, "play a real sport" crap.

Then my daughter wanted to play soccer. It was a mixed league, boys and girls on the same team. Man, that was some brutal stuff. Like hockey without the sticks - lots of fights, running the whole time, black and blue shins, the occasional bloody nose. Definitely not a sport for the lazy or the weak.
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Old 10-Oct-05, 02:11 PM   #8
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i still dont think soocer players are all too tuff. endurance, sure. but besides that they are pretty wussy.
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Old 10-Oct-05, 04:23 PM   #9
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dare you to say that to beckham or pepe, lol.

aside from that, i'm guessing you've never actually sat and watched a real soccer game and definitely haven't seen an "aussie rules" game.
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Old 10-Oct-05, 04:45 PM   #10
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Quote:
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aside from that, i'm guessing you've never actually sat and watched a real soccer game and definitely haven't seen an "aussie rules" game.
I know I hadn't until watching the kids play. Maybe with adults it's more civil and gentle. But with kids, it's one brutal game.
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Old 11-Oct-05, 12:26 PM   #11
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When I was a kid the doctor could tell I played soccer from my shins. They were bumpy in some spots from being hit so many times. I constantly had black and blue shins, and numerous scars on my shins/knees from soccer. It's a great sport!
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