Kenneth H. Cooper

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Kenneth H. Cooper (born March 4, 1931, Oklahoma City) [1] is a doctor of medicine and former Air Force lieutenant colonel from Oklahoma, who pioneered the benefits of doing aerobic exercise for maintaining and improving health. [2] [3] In 1966 he coined the term, and his book Aerobics was published in 1968, [4] [5] which emphasized a point system for improving the cardiovascular system. The popular mass market version was The New Aerobics ( ISBN   0-553-26874-0), published ten years later.

Contents

Career

A native of Oklahoma City, Cooper completed a 13-year military career in both the army and air force. During his Air Force career, he devised the simple Cooper test, which could conveniently and quickly establish the fitness level of large numbers of people. Originally the distance run in 12 minutes, it correlated well with the existing concept of VO2 max. Cooper left the Air Force in 1970, when he and his wife, Millie, moved to Dallas to start his companies.

Cooper is the founder of the non-profit research and education organization, The Cooper Institute, which was opened in 1970. Cooper is also the founder of and Chairman at the Cooper Aerobics Center in Dallas and McKinney, Texas, which comprises eight health and wellness entities. [6]

Cooper received the Golden Plate Award of the American Academy of Achievement in 1986. [7]

Cooper developed the Smart Snack Ribbon guidelines in 2003 for the Frito-Lay division of PepsiCo. [8]

Cooper has published 19 books that have sold 30 million copies and been translated into 41 languages. Cooper encouraged millions to become active and helped to launch modern fitness culture. He is known as the "father of aerobics". [9] [10]

He and his wife are parents of a son and daughter. Cooper has written about the importance of Christian religious faith in his life. [11] [12]

He graduated from the University of Oklahoma (BS, MD) and the Harvard School of Public Health (MPH).

Ideas on exercise and training effect

Cooper studied the effect of exercise in the late 1960s and popularized the term "training effect" [13] although that term had been used before. [14] [15] The measured effects were that muscles of respiration were strengthened, the heart was strengthened, blood pressure was sometimes lowered and the total amount of blood and number of red blood cells increased, making the blood a more efficient carrier of oxygen. VO2 Max was increased.[ citation needed ] He published his ideas in a book, Aerobics in 1968.

The exercise necessary can be accomplished by any aerobic exercise in a wide variety of schedules - Cooper found it best to award "points" for each amount of exercise [16] and require 30 points a week to maintain the Training Effect.[ citation needed ]

Cooper instead recommended a "12-minute test" (the Cooper test) followed by adherence to the appropriate starting-up schedule in his book. As always, he recommends that a physical exam should precede any exercise program.

The physiological effects of training have received much further study since Cooper's original work. It is now generally considered that effects of exercise on general metabolic rate (post-exercise) are comparatively small and the greatest effect occurs for only a few hours. Though endurance training does increase the VO2 max of many people, there is considerable variation in the degree to which it increases VO2 max between individuals. [17]

See also

Citations

  1. "Kenneth Cooper, MD, MPH". Cooper Aerobics Center. Born March 4, 1931, in Oklahoma City
  2. David Levinson, Karen Christensen MacKey (1999). Encyclopedia of World Sport: From Ancient Times to the Present. Oxford University Press. p. 2. ISBN   978-0-195-13195-6.
  3. Duncan, Joyce (2004). Sport in American culture: from Ali to X-games. ABC-CLIO. p. 6. ISBN   978-1-57607-024-6.
  4. Netburn, Deborah (30 March 2009). "Dr. Kenneth Cooper got a nation moving through aerobics. More than 40 years ago, his book touted a new type of exercise". latimes.com . Retrieved 13 June 2017.
  5. Cooper, Kenneth H. (January 1969) [1968]. Aerobics. Vol. 14490 (revised ed.). Bantam Books. ISBN   978-0-553-14490-1.
  6. Louie, Elaine (12 July 1995). "At Work With: Dr. Kenneth H. Cooper; The Fit Commandment". nytimes.com . Retrieved 13 June 2017.
  7. "Golden Plate Awardees of the American Academy of Achievement". www.achievement.org. American Academy of Achievement.
  8. "Snacking Now Made Easier with Frito-Lay's New Smart Snack Ribbon Label". August 5, 2003. Archived from the original on 2010-01-13.
  9. ""Father of Aerobics" Kenneth Cooper, MD, MPH to receive Healthy Cup Award from Harvard School of Public Health". News. April 16, 2008. Retrieved 8 October 2018.
  10. "Dr. Kenneth Cooper and How He Became Known as the Father of Aerobics". Club Industry. September 1, 2008. Retrieved 8 October 2018.
  11. "Faith and Fitness Magazine Interviews the Father of Aerobics: Does Faith Based Fitness Make Sense Today". churchfitness.com. September 2014. Retrieved 13 June 2017.
  12. James MacKey (2009). A Practical and Spiritual Guide to Personal Healing: A Mind, Body, Spirit Approach. iUniverse. p. 119. ISBN   978-0-595-45595-9.
  13. Cooper, K. (1985). The aerobics program for total well-being: Exercise, diet, and emotional balance. Bantam.[ page needed ][ dubious ]
  14. (U.S.), National College Physical Education Association for Men (1959). Proceedings [of The] Annual Meeting. Office of Publications Services, University of Illinois at Chicago Circle.
  15. Perceptual and Motor Skills. Perceptual and Motor Skills. 1959.
  16. Cooper, Kenneth H. (1981). Aerobics. ISBN   978-0-553-20992-1.[ page needed ]
  17. Bouchard, Claude; An, Ping; Rice, Treva; Skinner, James S.; Wilmore, Jack H.; Gagnon, Jacques; Pérusse, Louis; Leon, Arthur S.; Rao, D. C. (September 1999). "Familial aggregation of V̇O2max response to exercise training: results from the HERITAGE Family Study". Journal of Applied Physiology. 87 (3): 1003–8. doi:10.1152/jappl.1999.87.3.1003. PMID   10484570.

Related Research Articles

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<span class="mw-page-title-main">Exercise</span> Bodily activity intended to improve health

Exercise is intentional physical activity to enhance or maintain fitness and overall health.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Aerobic exercise</span> Low to high intensity physical exercise

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<span class="mw-page-title-main">Exercise physiology</span>

Exercise physiology is the physiology of physical exercise. It is one of the allied health professions, and involves the study of the acute responses and chronic adaptations to exercise. Exercise physiologists are the highest qualified exercise professionals and utilise education, lifestyle intervention and specific forms of exercise to rehabilitate and manage acute and chronic injuries and conditions.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Physical fitness</span> State of health and well-being

Physical fitness is a state of health and well-being and, more specifically, the ability to perform aspects of sports, occupations and daily activities. Physical fitness is generally achieved through proper nutrition, moderate-vigorous physical exercise, and sufficient rest along with a formal recovery plan.

The cooper test which was designed by Kenneth H. Cooper in 1968 for US military use is a physical fitness test. In its original form, the point of the test is to run as far as possible within 12 minutes. Pacing is important, as the participant will not cover a maximal distance if they begin with a pace too close to an all out sprint. The outcome is based on the distance the test person ran, their age and their sex.

V̇O2 max (also maximal oxygen consumption, maximal oxygen uptake or maximal aerobic capacity) is the maximum rate of oxygen consumption attainable during physical exertion. The name is derived from three abbreviations: "V̇" for volume (the dot over the V indicates "per unit of time" in Newton's notation), "O2" for oxygen, and "max" for maximum and usually normalized per kilogram of body mass. A similar measure is V̇O2 peak (peak oxygen consumption), which is the measurable value from a session of physical exercise, be it incremental or otherwise. It could match or underestimate the actual V̇O2 max. Confusion between the values in older and popular fitness literature is common. The capacity of the lung to exchange oxygen and carbon dioxide is constrained by the rate of blood oxygen transport to active tissue.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Exercise intensity</span>

Exercise intensity refers to how much energy is expended when exercising. Perceived intensity varies with each person. It has been found that intensity has an effect on what fuel the body uses and what kind of adaptations the body makes after exercise. Intensity is the amount of physical power that the body uses when performing an activity. For example, exercise intensity defines how hard the body has to work to walk a mile in 20 minutes.

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<span class="mw-page-title-main">Cardiovascular fitness</span> Heart-related component of physical fitness

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Training masks are facial masks worn to limit the intake of air during breathing. Their ostensible purpose is to strengthen the respiratory musculature by making it work harder. There is some evidence that they may improve endurance capacity (VO2 max) and power output, but research into their benefits has so far generally proven inconclusive.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Outdoor fitness</span>

Outdoor fitness consists of exercise undertaken outside a building for the purpose of improving physical fitness. It contrasts with exercise undertaken inside a gym or health club for the same purpose. The activity may be undertaken in a park, in the wilderness, or other outdoor location. The popularity of outdoor fitness grew rapidly in the second-half of the twentieth century and grew as a commercial consumer market in the twenty-first century.

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