Updated
Updated · The Week · Jun 25
Sumit Dubey Debunks 1-Minute Workout Myth, Urges Daily Movement for Long-Term Health
Updated
Updated · The Week · Jun 25

Sumit Dubey Debunks 1-Minute Workout Myth, Urges Daily Movement for Long-Term Health

2 articles · Updated · The Week · Jun 25

Summary

  • Short, 1-minute workouts can help, but they are not enough to deliver broad, lasting fitness gains across strength, stamina, mobility, balance and body composition, fitness expert Sumit Dubey said.
  • Clinical evidence behind high-intensity bursts usually comes from structured programs with warmups, rest intervals and repeated sessions over time, not from a standalone 60 seconds of effort.
  • Dubey warned that oversimplified social-media claims can set unrealistic expectations and push beginners into intense exercise too quickly, raising the risk of injury and exhaustion.
  • Regular movement—walking, stretching, light lifting, outdoor play and breaking up long sitting periods—builds healthier routines more reliably than occasional all-out sessions.
  • For busy people and those leaving inactive habits, brief workouts still have value as a starting point, but Dubey said lasting health depends on consistency, nutrition, rest and sustainable daily activity.

Insights

Are 60-second workouts a dangerous fitness myth or a smart first step for the chronically inactive?
What is the true 'minimum effective dose' of exercise needed to reverse the damage of a sedentary life?