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Pakistanis are lazy finds Stanford University

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Do you live in the world's laziest country?
By James GallagherHealth and science reporter, BBC News website
  • 12 July 2017
  • From the sectionHealth
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Image copyrightTIM ALTHOFF
US scientists have amassed "planetary-scale" data from people's smartphones to see how active we really are.

The Stanford University analysis of 68 million days' worth of minute-by-minute data showed the average number of daily steps was 4,961.

Hong Kong was top averaging 6,880 a day, while Indonesia was bottom of the rankings with just 3,513.

But the findings also uncovered intriguing details that could help tackle obesity.

Most smartphones have a built-in accelerometer that can record steps and the researchers used anonymous data from more than 700,000 people who used the Argus activity monitoring app.

Scott Delp, a professor of bioengineering and one of the researchers, said: "The study is 1,000 times larger than any previous study on human movement.

"There have been wonderful health surveys done, but our new study provides data from more countries, many more subjects, and tracks people's activity on an ongoing basis.

"This opens the door to new ways of doing science at a much larger scale than we have been able to do before."

Activity inequality
The findings have been published in the journal Nature and the study authors say the results give important insights for improving people's health.

The average number of steps in a country appears to be less important for obesity levels, for example.

The key ingredient was "activity inequality" - it's like wealth inequality, except instead of the difference between rich and poor, it's the difference between the fittest and laziest.

The bigger the activity inequality, the higher the rates of obesity.

Tim Althoff, one of the researchers, said: "For instance, Sweden had one of the smallest gaps between activity rich and activity poor... it also had one of the lowest rates of obesity."

The United States and Mexico both have similar average steps, but the US has higher activity inequality and obesity levels.

Global sleeping patterns revealed by app data

Has wearable tech had its day?

Is that fitness tracker you're using a waste of money?

The researchers were surprised that activity inequality was largely driven by differences between men and women.

In countries like Japan - with low obesity and low inequality - men and women exercised to similar degrees.

But in countries with high inequality, like the US and Saudi Arabia, it was women spending less time being active.

Jure Leskovec, also part of the research team, said: "When activity inequality is greatest, women's activity is reduced much more dramatically than men's activity, and thus the negative connections to obesity can affect women more greatly."

The Stanford team say the findings help explain global patterns of obesity and give new ideas for tackling it.

For example, they rated 69 US cities for how easy they were to get about on foot.

The smartphone data showed that cities like New York and San Francisco were pedestrian friendly and had "high walkability".

Whereas you really need a car to get around "low walkability" cities including Houston and Memphis.

Unsurprisingly, people walked more in places where it was easier to walk.

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Image copyrightTIM ALTHOFF
The researchers say this could help design town and cities that promote greater physical activity.
http://www.bbc.com/news/health-40570442
 
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The Burj khalifa was built by a chinese company the design was from a Taiwanese!!!!
They get labour from south Asian countries to work like animals . Infact , many buildings in gcc require S. A poor labour that include pakistanis .
Pakistanis are not lazy , they just don't have opportunities to work and prove .
 
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I don't think Pakistanis have most internet or smartphone users..Most workaholics leave that country

I do not know what the numbers are for smartphone penetration. In India low end models are below $100. Your Nokia basic cellphone is $15. it makes a difference
 
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They get labour from south Asian countries to work like animals . Infact , many buildings in gcc require S. A poor labour that include pakistanis .
Pakistanis are not lazy , they just don't have opportunities to work and prove .
Dubai doesn't have any labour from Asia and the gcc got now other opportunities for construction you troll you just want arab countries looking like fools like you that's why so many videos coming up on YouTube from those poor foreigner who are not foreigner but migrants who are getting punished nice muslims I know not all of those foreigners are muslims but like you said Pakistanis are also muslims and they just want to destroy gcc's economy
 
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Issue is obvious, innit? Pakistanis are not connected to the net a lot, so are very unlikely to use such apps. Those that do are going to from the higher class who will obviously walk less.

This is hardly a country where you find Wifi everywhere.
 
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This analysis might be correct for High and Medium income groups but most in the low income groups might not have access to smart phones at all. In South Asian countries which are home to millions living near or below poverty lines, such experiments may not necessarily project the accurate results.
 
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Dubai doesn't have any labour from Asia and the gcc got now other opportunities for construction you troll you just want arab countries looking like fools like you that's why so many videos coming up on YouTube from those poor foreigner who are not foreigner but migrants who are getting punished nice muslims I know not all of those foreigners are muslims but like you said Pakistanis are also muslims and they just want to destroy gcc's economy
Whaaaaat?
http://www.migrationpolicy.org/article/labor-migration-united-arab-emirates-challenges-and-responses
With immigrants, who come particularly from India, Bangladesh, and Pakistan, comprising over 90 percent of the country's private workforce, the UAE attracts both low- and high-skilled migrants due to its economic attractiveness, relative political stability, and modern infrastructure—despite a drop in oil prices and the international banking crisis in 2008.

This analysis might be correct for High and Medium income groups but most in the low income groups might not have access to smart phones at all. In South Asian countries which are home to millions living near or below poverty lines, such experiments may not necessarily project the accurate results.
Exactly, both our countries are such that availability of internet is a luxury, not a need
 
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Ok, daily number of steps. Do they substitute number of steps with another form of exercise?

I don't walk much either, but swim or bike daily. But this metric I'd be pretty lazy too, but that isn't the case... usually. Walking isn't necessarily tied to productivity either. I'm a programmer and do much of my work either at a desk or in bed (when I don't have another assignment), but I still manage to get a lot done everyday despite not taking a whole lot of steps doing it.
Most of the Paks with smartphones are lazy baskets who think doing anything physical is best left to the poor. The average Pak in rural areas would clock up dozens of miles as they engage in hard physical work to eke out living from poor sandy soil. The well off in cities (they own the smartphones) and it is they who will have fallen within the 'radar' of this study regard it sin to do anything manuel. Things are changing but it takes time for social habits to evolve. In the meantime a whole generation devouring meat, fats, and sweets washed down with guzzles of coke are heading straight for cardiac units.
 
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Btw, I can't wait for the Pakistan haters who've settled abroad to talk about how Pakistanis don't work hard, and that's why they're abroad
 
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Whaaaaat?
http://www.migrationpolicy.org/article/labor-migration-united-arab-emirates-challenges-and-responses
With immigrants, who come particularly from India, Bangladesh, and Pakistan, comprising over 90 percent of the country's private workforce, the UAE attracts both low- and high-skilled migrants due to its economic attractiveness, relative political stability, and modern infrastructure—despite a drop in oil prices and the international banking crisis in 2008.


Exactly, both our countries are such that availability of internet is a luxury, not a need
If those people can just work as foreigners in other countries why not by them at home ???
 
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Btw, I can't wait for the Pakistan haters who've settled abroad to talk about how Pakistanis don't work hard, and that's why they're abroad
Not me my friend. I see the poor working like animals in Pakistan mostly for subsistence wage and without any safety gear when working in dangerous environments.
 
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