The New York Times
Standing Up at Your Desk Could Make You Smarter
By Richard A. Friedman
Dr. Friedman is a contributing opinion writer and the director of the psychopharmacology clinic at the Weill Cornell Medical College. April 19, 2018
TED TALK
Why sitting is bad for you
By Murat Dalkilinç
Sitting down for brief periods can help us recover from stress or recuperate from exercise. But nowadays, our lifestyles make us sit much more than we move around. Are our bodies built for such a sedentary existence? Murat Dalkilinç investigates the hidden risks of sitting down.
See the videoMAYO CLINIC
THE SITTING DISEASE
James Levine Ph.D, professor of medicine at Mayo Clinic
The list of health issues associated with sitting ranges from obesity, diabetes to depression and certain cancers. James Levine, M.D., Ph.D, professor of medicine at Mayo Clinic and a world-renowned leader in obesity research and co-director of the Mayo.
SEE THE VIDEO
National Institute for Health Research (Uk)
By Emmanuel Stamatakis, Published: September 26, 2013
Are Sitting Occupations Associated with Increased All-Cause, Cancer, and Cardiovascular Disease Mortality Risk? A Pooled Analysis of Seven British Population Cohorts
THE HUFFINGTON POST
Sitting Is the New Smoking: Ways a Sedentary Lifestyle Is Killing You
sEE THE ARTICLEshop now
Standing Desk