Skip to menu Skip to content Skip to footer
News

Is 12 minutes of exercise all that is needed to fight diabetes?

7 December 2016
Is 12 minutes of exercise all that is needed to fight diabetes?
Is 12 minutes of exercise all that is needed to fight diabetes?

A University of Queensland researcher is trialling a 12-minute exercise plan that aims to fight type 2 diabetes in a flash.

UQ School of Human Movement and Nutrition Sciences expert Professor Jeff Coombes said regular exercise was vital for the management of diabetes, helping individuals with the condition to live a healthier life.

“However, routine exercise is often difficult to fit into people’s everyday lives due to time constraints,” Professor Coombes said.

“We have shown that as little as four minutes of aerobic exercise is enough to improve factors such as cholesterol, blood pressure, fitness and vascular function, and prevent fatal events such as stroke and heart attack.

“We are now adding eight minutes of strength training to see if this is also effective for people with type 2 diabetes.”

The study is being conducted at UQ’s St Lucia campus in Brisbane, with participants undergoing free supervised treatments three to four times per week for eight weeks with accredited exercise physiologists.

“We are assessing the health benefits of this exercise dose via several tests that measure blood glucose, fitness, cholesterol, body fat, and vascular function, which are all factors that increase the risk of cardiovascular disease,” Professor Coombes said.

“We are specifically targeting people who have been diagnosed with type 2 diabetes and have low levels of physical activity or fitness.

“We are providing health services worth a total of about $5000 in this trial.”

A limited number of places for the trial remain available.

More information is on the Exercise for Type 2 Diabetes website.

Media: Trishan Gajanand, t.gajanand@uq.edu.au , +61431053474; UQ Communications, Robert Burgin, r.burgin@uq.edu.au, +617 3346 3035, +61 448 410 364. 

Related articles

Male indian doctor giving prescription to male patient at clinic
Analysis

Australia needs doctors – so why are hundreds of qualified international physicians unable to work?

Qualified doctors who could be working in clinics and hospitals are instead driving Ubers. Here are some practical ways to fix that.
27 November 2025
A woman in a wheel chair looking up towards her carer

Greater attention needed on community service workforce

Lack of job security and poor career progression are discouraging Australians from working in the community care sector, a report by UQ researchers has found.
26 November 2025

Media contact

Subscribe to UQ News

Get the latest from our newsroom.