Building a stronger body through strength-promoting exercise

Focusing on building strength just twice a week is part of the blueprint for optimal health, says Kinesiology professor Stuart Phillips says.

December 1, 2017

Expert Featured In This Story

Stuart Phillips
Stuart Phillips

Professor

See Profile

On December 6, McMaster kinesiology professor Stuart Phillips will discuss the unique benefits of strength-promoting exercise at Just the Facts Please: An Exercise in Achieving Optimal Health, a public event exploring the science behind cardiovascular, skeletal and brain health. Phillips explains his topic a bit more here:

Q: What will you be speaking about at the conference?
My talk focuses on the integral role that strength-promoting exercise (SPE) plays in health, especially as we age.

What’s new in your research when it comes to achieving optimal health?
It’s clear that being physically active – including 150 minutes per week of moderate to vigorous physical activity – is critical for optimal health. However, recent revelations have shown that there are unique and critically important features of SPE for health.

What solutions or guidance does your research offer the public?
Don’t ignore the portion of the physical activity guidelines that promotes twice-weekly engagement in SPE! As we age, the importance of strength and power becomes crucial for achieving optimal health, independence, and physical mobility.

Why is it so pressing to talk about musculoskeletal health and strength training?
Because it’s a unique form of exercise that not many people take part in, and that confers unique health benefits. With the aging population, this is going to become an absolutely vital concept for older people to maintain their independence.

What do you hope people will take away from your talk?
The physical activity guidelines, including twice-weekly engagement in SPE, and 150 minutes per week of moderate to vigorous physical activity are THE best blueprint for optimal health. No drug, or combination of drugs, can top the risk reducing impact of following these guidelines. The widespread scalability and generic good that being physically offers is unparalleled by ANY other lifestyle habit.

A smiling woman doing a lunge on a yoga mat, holding hand weights.

Consistency over perfection, new resistance-training guidelines say

'The best resistance training program is the one you’ll actually stick with.'
A pregnant person's hands cradle their baby bump.

Nearly half of severe pregnancy complications happen before labour or after birth and are not monitored

While monitoring typically focuses on complications during labour and delivery, researchers found 45 per cent of dangerous events take place outside the delivery room, during pregnancy or in the six weeks postpartum. 
A stethoscope and needle rest on a poster for measles.

Study examines what Reddit reveals about measles’ return

Researcher Rachel Zhou examined thousands of Reddit conversations to understand how people made sense of the measles’ resurgence in 2025.