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  • Fit Feature | Burnout: Thriving or Just Surviving?

    by David Barr | Jul 17, 2019

    Client Burnout Fix ACSM

    Key Points:

    1. Recognize the signs of job burnout

    2. Identify strategies to reduce symptoms of job burnout


     

    Think about your work tasks, experiences and interactions over the last few months. Do you feel like you are thriving or just surviving?

    If you’ve been feeling overworked, unmotivated, detached, irritable or you experience a lack of personal accomplishment at work, you are not alone. One in four workers experiences the symptoms of burnout. The chronic, overwhelming stress related to feeling overworked is one of the many symptoms.

    With the rate of burnout continuing to rise, it has become more important to be aware of the symptoms in order to prevent it.  Although it is outside the scope of practice for health and fitness professionals to diagnose or counsel clients who exhibit burnout, it is important to learn how to recognize signs in their employees, clients or themselves.


    Burnout: The Three Core Dimensions

    The burnout experience can be best described as multi-dimensional, which leads to the development of Maslach’s Theory. The three core dimensions include:

    1) Exhaustion relates to feeling over-extended and depleted of one’s emotional and physical resources at work, which leads to fatigue and loss of energy and optimism.

    • Contributor: A mismatch in workload where too many demands exhaust an individual’s energy, making recovery impossible.

    2) Cynicism is an immediate reaction to exhaustion that prompts actions to distance oneself from work as a way to cope and may promote irritability and/or anger.

    • Contributor: A mismatch between perceived fairness in the workplace such as inequity of workload, pay or inappropriate handling of promotions. These contributors fuel a deep sense of cynicism.

    3) Inefficacy arises from exhaustion or cynicism. This inefficacy promotes feelings of ineffectiveness and reduced personal accomplishment, and thus lowers productivity.

    • Contributor: A mismatch in control where individuals lack authority over the resources needed to do their work, which leads to feelings of powerlessness.

     

    Strategies: What can we do about burnout?


    Coping Skills: Focus on building capacity to cope with work challenges and demands through decompression strategies. A work-life balance, participation in health and fitness activities, and adopting relaxation techniques (e.g., breathing, meditation, mindfulness) are a few ways to decompress from work.

    Value & Reward: People may be able to tolerate a greater workload if they value the work or feel well rewarded for their efforts. Build a culture that celebrates success and recognizes what individuals do well.

    Engagement: Emphasize building engagement with work that supports the positive development of energy, dedication and effectiveness, which promotes well-being and productivity.

    Take-Aways

    Burnout may lead to impaired quality of work, lower productivity and reduced opportunities for positive experiences. It is associated with decreased job satisfaction and reduced commitment to the job or organization. Understanding the symptoms and causes of burnout can help empower individuals to take actions that prevent burnout before it starts.

    To learn more about burnout in further detail, please read Dr. Allen’s article “A Fitness Professional’s Guide to Recognizing and Coping with Job Burnout” in the May/June 2019 issue of ACSM’s Health & Fitness Journal®.

    ACSM Fitness Journal May-June 2019
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     or Student Member to access the full ACSM's Health & Fitness Journal® library 


    Article based on: 
    Allen C. A fitness professional’s guide to recognizing and coping with job burnout. ACSMs Health Fit J. 2019; 23 (3):11–15. doi: 10.1249/FIT.0000000000000471.  

    Author:

    Vanessa Kercher PhD
    Vanessa M. Kercher, Ph.D., SSC, M.Ed., BESS, specializes in the science, study, and measurement of behavior as a psychometrician at The Summit Medical Fitness Center. Dr. Kercher is responsible for the design, development, and evaluation of new and existing measures related to health behaviors for clinical and performance programs. Her research passion focuses on helping individuals optimize their physical activity experiences to promote sustainable, positive health behaviors. She serves as the digital editor of ACSM’s Health & Fitness Journal®

    Earn CECs based on this free article

    ACSM CEC Quiz Health Fitness Journal
    Featured CEC Quiz | Your Guide to Fixing Client Burnout
  • The Athlete's Kitchen: Carbs in the News

    by Caitlin Kinser | Jul 17, 2019

    carbohydrate athletic performanceToo many of today's athletes believe carbohydrates are "bad." If that's true, what does the latest sports nutrition research say? The following studies, presented at the American College of Sports Medicine's 66th Annual Meeting (Orlando FL, May 2019) indicate sports scientists agree that carbohydrates (grains, fruits, veggies; sugars, starches) can be health- and performance-enhancing sport foods. Here are some answers to questions posed by ACSM researchers.

    Does sugar cause diabetes?

    No. The problem is less about sugar, and more about lack of exercise. Most fit people can enjoy a little sugar without fear of health issues. Muscles in fit bodies burn the sugar for fuel. In unfit bodies, the sugar accumulates in the blood. Fitness reduces the risk of developing Type 2 diabetes.

    In a 6-week training study to boost fitness, 35 middle-aged men with over-weight or obesity did either endurance cycling, weight lifting, or high intensity interval training. Regardless of kind of exercise, all types of training improved the bodies' ability to utilize glucose with less insulin.

    These subjects had blood glucose levels within the normal range at the start of the study; their glucose levels improved with exercise. While we need more research to fine-tune the types of exercise that best manage blood glucose, rest assured that living an active lifestyle is a promising way to reduce your risk of type 2 diabetes.

    Can natural foods replace ultra-processed commercial sport drinks and foods?

    Yes, standard (natural) foods can be fine alternatives to commercial sport fuels. Look no farther than bananas! In a study, trained cyclists who enjoyed bananas (for carbs) plus water (for fluid) during a 46 mile (75 km) bike ride performed just as well as those who consumed a sport drink with an equivalent amount of carbs plus water.

    Natural foods offer far more than just fuel; they contain abundant bioactive compounds that have a positive impact on health and performance.  For example, after the ride with bananas, the cyclists had lower levels of oxylipins (bioactive compounds that increase with excessive inflammation) compared to the sport drink ride. Athletes who believe commercial sports foods and fuel are better than standard foods overlook the benefits from the plethora of bioactive compounds found in real foods.

    Are potatoes—an easy-to-digest sports fuel—a viable alternative to commercial gels?

    Are potatoes—an easy-to-digest sports fuel—a viable alternative to commercial gels
    Yes. In a study, trained cyclists ate breakfast and soon thereafter competed in a 2-hour cycling challenge that was then followed by a time trial. For fuel, the subjects consumed either potato puree, gels, or water. The results suggest 1) both emptied similarly from the gut, and 2) potatoes are as good as gels for supporting endurance performance.

    The cyclists completed the time trial in about 33 minutes when they ate the potato or the gel. This is six minutes faster than with plain water. Any fuel is better than no fuel!

    Is fruit juice a healthful choice for athletes?

    Yes, fruit juice can be an excellent source of carbohydrate to fuel muscles. Colorful juices (such as grape, cherry, blueberry, orange) also offer anti-inflammatory phytochemicals called polyphenols. In a study, subjects did muscle-damaging exercise and then consumed a post-exercise and a bedtime protein recovery drink that included either pomegranate juice, tart cherry juice, or just sugar. The protein-polyphenol beverages boosted muscle recovery better than the sugar beverage.

    Does carbohydrate intake trigger intestinal distress for ultra-marathoners?

    Not always. During a 37 mile (60-kilometer) ultra-marathon, 33 runners reported their food and fluid intake. They consumed between 150 to 360 calories (37-90 g carb) per hour, with an average of 240 calories (60 g) per hour. This meets the recommendation for carbohydrate intake during extended exercise (240-360 calories; 60-90 g carb/hour). The majority (73%) of runners reported some type of gut issues. Of those, 20% of the complaints were ranked serious. Interestingly, the GI complaints were not linked to carbohydrate intake or to gut damage. In fact, a higher carbohydrate intake potentially reduced the risk of gut injury. (More research is needed to confirm this.) Unfortunately, runners cannot avoid all factors (such as jostling, dehydration, and nerves) that can trigger intestinal problems.

    We know that consuming carb during extended exercise enhances performance, but does it matter if endurance athletes consume a slow-digesting or a fast-digesting carbohydrate prior to extended exercise?

    Likely not, but this can depend on how long you are exercising, and how often you want to consume carbohydrate. Well-trained runners consumed 200 calories of carbohydrate in UCAN (slow-digesting) vs. Cytocarb (fast-digesting) prior to a three-hour moderate run during which they consumed just water. At the end of the run, they did an intense sprint to fatigue. The sprint times were similar, regardless of the type of pre-run fuel.

    That said, the slow digesting carb provided a more stable and consistent fuel source that maintained blood glucose concentration during the long run. Hence, endurance athletes want to experiment with a variety of beverages to determine which ones settle best and help them feel good during extended exercise. A slow-digesting carb can help maintain stable blood glucose levels without consuming fuel during the run. Fast-digesting carbs need carbohydrate supplementation throughout the exercise to maintain normal blood glucose.

    Concluding comments

    These studies indicate carbohydrate can help athletes perform well. To be sure your muscles are fully fueled, include some starchy food (wholesome cereal, grain, bread, etc.) as the foundation of each meal. Consuming carbs from just fruit or veggies will likely leave you with inadequately replenished muscle glycogen. Think twice before choosing a chicken Caesar salad for your recovery meal.

     

    Nancy Clark, MS, RD, FACSM, counsels both casual and competitive athletes at her office in Newton, MA. She is the author of many books as well as articles and resources available on nancyclarkrd.com. This blog post originally appeared on her website on July16, 2019.

  • Exam Content Outline Update | Levels of Cognitive Complexity Added

    by David Barr | Jul 15, 2019

    ACSM Certification Exam Content Outline

    ACSM Adds Levels of Cognitive Complexity to its Exam Content Outlines

    The job of an exercise professional can range from simple and complex tasks. Much in the same way, ACSM exams are written at different levels of cognitive complexity. Cognitive complexity is a way of describing the rigor of certain job tasks. A low level of cognitive processing is simple remembering of information whereas a higher level of cognitive processing includes analysis, evaluations, and judgments. ACSM uses three levels of cognitive challenge: recall, application, and synthesis.

     

    Recall = remember basic facts, information, or steps in a process.

     

    Application = comprehend and implement processes, interpret simple results, or summarize information.

     

    Synthesis = differentiate, relate parts of a system, make judgments on new information based on given criteria, critique a process or product, make recommendations.

     

    Starting in 2017, ACSM included these cognitive levels into its ACSM-GEI, ACSM-CPT, ACSM-EP, and ACSM-CEP exam content outlines. It is important for candidates to note that exam questions are written with the cognitive complexity in mind. For example, it is recommended that a personal trainer candidate should have general knowledge of the documents and instructions provided to clients during an initial interview, while, on the other hand, they should have a strong command of what to do with the information (evaluate risk, develop an exercise plan, select an appropriate physical assessment based on ability/goal/availability/need, etc.); see figure 1.

    ACSM Exam Content Outline Recall Application Synthesis

    Figure 1. ACSM-CPT exam content outline excerpt of content domain I.

     

    Below are example questions written at the recall, application, and synthesis level for the ACSM-CPT, ACSM-EP, and ACSM-CEP certification exams:

     

    Recall – Personal Trainer

     

    When should a personal trainer administer a PAR-Q+ to a client?

    A. before the fitness evaluation

    B. following the first exercise session

    C. during the physician’s medical examination

    D. after creating an exercise prescription

     

    Application – Exercise Physiologist

     

    An exercise physiologist is conducting a Bruce submaximal treadmill test. Near the end of stage 2, the client reports that they are starting to experience chest discomfort. The client indicates that they would like to continue. Which of the following is the most appropriate?

    A. Continue to stage 3.

    B. Maintain the speed and gradient.

    C. Decrease the speed and gradient by 2%.

    D. Discontinue the test.

     

    Synthesis – Clinical Exercise Physiologist

     

    A phase II cardiac rehab patient with history of MI/PCI experiences chest discomfort and shortness of breath during exercise. The single lead ECG is indeterminate for ST changes.

    Vitals are as follows:

    • SaO2 – 96%
    • Heart rate – 112 bpm
    • Blood pressure – 132/88 mm Hg
    • Symptoms do not improve with seated rest and sublingual nitroglycerin.

     

    What step is the most appropriate to perform next?

    A. Check blood glucose.

    B. Obtain a 12-lead ECG.

    C. Give supplemental oxygen.

    D. Have patient perform Valsalva maneuver.

     

    Regardless of cognitive complexity used, ACSM Credential Committees review the performance of each question before making it live on an exam through a process called pre-testing. Pre-testing allows exam developers to gather statistical information about new questions without affecting a candidate’s performance on the exam. Pre-test items are randomly placed throughout the exam and will appear the same as scored items. Candidates should treat every item as if it will be scored.

    Author: Francis Neric
    Francis Neric, MS, MBA, is the national director of certification for the American College of Sports Medicine (ACSM). Neric leads the development and administration of ACSM's state-of-the-art certification programs. He also serves on the Committee on Accreditation for the Exercise Sciences (CoAES) and Coalition for the Registration of Exercise Professionals (CREP) which directly supports the mission, vision, and values of the college. Neric has a BS degree in exercise science from CSU Long Beach, a MS degree in clinical exercise physiology from CSU Fullerton, and an MBA in management from the University of Colorado at Colorado Springs.
  • Industry-Presented Nutrition Course | Integrating Nutrition Into Training

    by David Barr | Jul 12, 2019

    EXOS presents this free sports nutrition course | Earn 0.5 CECs


    Free Nutrition Course ACSM EXOS

    EXOS Presents: performance nutrition principles as a framework you can use to systematically help your clients upgrade nutritional behaviors that will play a significant role in maximizing energy, improving recovery, and creating a new nutrition "normal" that they can sustain throughout their life.

    Free Nutrition Course CECs

    About the course:

    This course includes an online video from an ACSM Industry Partner and a corresponding online quiz. All course content will be presented to you electronically upon access. This includes all videos, quizzes, and certificates (certificates awarded upon successful completion of the quizzes).

    Available ACSM CECs 0.5

    Learning Objectives for EXOS Integrating Nutrition Into Training:

    • Understand EXOS nutrition methodology
    • Enhance base level nutrition knowledge
    • Leverage EXOS nutrition principles to identify nutrition strategies for recovery
    • Discover additional educational resources to continue learning

    Access free course and earn CECs


    Recommended Nutrition Content

    ACSM Nutrition for Exercise Science
    Free Sample Download - ACSM's Nutrition for Exercise Science

    Sports nutrition myths ACSM
    Sports Nutrition Myths Busted

    ACSM's Nutrition for Exercise Science
    10 Things You Need to Know About Sports Nutrition

     


    Recommended Courses

    POLAR ACSM Course
     Heart Rate Monitoring Assessment

  • 5 Things You Need to Know About: Farm to Table

    by David Barr | Jul 12, 2019

    Food for thought to inspire your next food conversation with clients and potential clients

    Farm to Table

    The U.S. Farmers & Ranchers Alliance (@USFRA) hosted a panel discussion at ACSM’s 2019 International Health and Fitness Summit (#ACSMSummit) in Chicago. The panel included a scientist (@MickeyRubin), a farmer/bodybuilder (@SJSchneider10  Sam Schneider), and me (@KimKirchherr), a registered dietitian and ACSM certified personal trainer.  The topics we covered ranged from farm to table, literally. Here is some food for thought to inspire your next food conversation with clients and potential clients:

    1. Only 2% of the population have direct familial ties to agriculture currently. With people not having direct knowledge of agriculture in their day-to-day lives, it makes sense that questions about food are becoming more common. Food questions are complex and involve the need for expertise from a variety of perspectives, which was the inspiration for our panel at the ACSM Summit.

       

    2. To get the nutrition we need, there are many “right ways” to eat.. We have a responsibility to learn more about food, nutrition and farming. Building a network of experts is important for us as health and fitness professionals, and as people who eat! We can help answer questions and connect our audiences with the nutrition experts they need in addition to us. Social media, video and other ways to connect make it easy to go directly to a farmer, dietitian, scientist or chef – true experts in the areas where we may have questions.

       

    3. When it comes to the farm-to-table conversation, there are several terms that need to be defined to help conversation and understanding. A great example of this is the word “sustainability.” For someone working on losing excess weight, can it be kept off long term? A farmer’s view would include aspects like growing/raising food to meet the demands of the population, while also working to preserve/improve natural resources and support a multi-generational family as a viable business.To a dietitian and personal trainer, this could include whether it supports personal and planetary health. This complex conversation actually includes simple ways we can all work together to improve both the conversation and the outcome. An easy way to consider “everything” is to take a moment to discuss the actual words used in these food conversations that make it easy to find the win-win-win for the planet, the person and the plants/animals. If we consistently consider this in our conversations, we will be on to something good.

       

    4. Current research hasn’t found significant difference in growing styles of food when it comes to nutrition. This basically means that however and whatever food you choose to eat, a farmer has you covered. Farmers of all types are local to where we live, and food is grown where it makes sense to do so.  Illinois is not a good place to grow bananas, as an example. Regardless of what food you buy and eat, remember to wash your hands before, during and after food preparationseparate raw foods from cooked, store food properly and wash your fruits and veggies before eating them.

       

    5. Resources exist to help the conversation. Consider scope of practice, what you are passionate about and how you can build your own network of professionals to help make your responses more valuable for your clients. The following resources are a good place to start.

    Watch the full session and Earn 3 CECs!


    Author Suggested Resources [external links]:

    FDA Qualified Health Claims

    FDA Definition of “Healthy”

    USDA Know your Farmer, Know your Food

    Grass Finished, Grain Finished Beef (with label reading information)

    USFRA Agriculture 101

    Foods, flavors, and recipes your state/territory is known for, and how they fit into your healthy eating style.

    Cooking Methods to Preserve Nutrients in Fruits and Veggies

    Isothiocyanates from Brassica Vegetables—Effects of Processing, Cooking, Mastication, and Digestion

    Vitamin B12

    Author:Kim Kirchherr
    Kim Kirchherr, MS, RD, LDN, CDE, FAND, ACSM-CPT

    Kim is an award-winning registered dietitian and a certified personal trainer (ACSM). She has experience in agriculture, supermarket, media (traditional and social), hospital-based health and fitness centers, as well as outpatient medical nutrition therapy programs. She served as the Chair of the Food & Culinary Professionals Dietetic Practice Group (FCP) for 2017-2018 and has been chair of both the FCP Agriculture and Supermarket Subgroups. Kim is a past president of Illinois Academy of Nutrition and Dietetics. Both sides of Kim’s family have ties to agriculture. Her expertise lies in knowing, informing, and converging mutual goals of individuals (consumers), health professionals, agriculture experts, and retailers for better outcomes for all. You can see more of Kim at her website kimkirchherr.com

    The views expressed are those of the author and do not necessarily reflect those of the ACSM.

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