New Delhi: With a fall in temperature and India's major marathons around the corner, it is peak training season for runners in New Delhi. But the spike in smog, however, is making training difficult for most recreational athletes.
Nakul Butta, an ultra-runner and coach, always checks the Air Quality Index before every run. If PM 2.5 is over 400, he recommends that runners should stay indoors.
"Around this time of the year we do a lot of indoor running for our shorter runs, and for the longer runs we come out and wear pollution masks," Mr Butta says.
According to doctors, exposure to pollutants can cause chronic obstructive pulmonary diseases like asthma, chronic bronchitis, cardiac problems and even strokes. Dr Ashok Ahuja, who specialises in sports medicine, does not think masks are the solution.
"The fine particles of 2.5 microns which are 10 times less than your hair size will filter through, even these masks can't help," Dr Ahuja opines. "They can also hamper cardio-respiratory endurance," he warns.
Instead, Dr. Ahuja recommends that runners should consume antioxidants to cut down harmful "free radicals," hydrate more to flush out toxins, and try steam inhalations after workouts. Indoor training, exercises like swimming, or training outside the city are also possible alternative for runners. However, runners must stop training if they experience an allergic reaction to pollutants.
But some runners in Delhi are not willing to put their health at risk. Aman Yadav, 32, has run the Airtel Delhi Half Marathon seven times, but he dropped out last year and is planning to drop out again this year.
"You wake up in the morning, you're gung ho I'm going to get a good workout, and then you realise that going out and running may actually be harmful for your health," explains Mr Yadav. He pointed out that the best weather for running coincides with the worst pollution, making training impossible. "I don't think anyone who has some sanity in themselves will go out and train in this weather," he adds.
Nakul Butta, an ultra-runner and coach, always checks the Air Quality Index before every run. If PM 2.5 is over 400, he recommends that runners should stay indoors.
"Around this time of the year we do a lot of indoor running for our shorter runs, and for the longer runs we come out and wear pollution masks," Mr Butta says.
"The fine particles of 2.5 microns which are 10 times less than your hair size will filter through, even these masks can't help," Dr Ahuja opines. "They can also hamper cardio-respiratory endurance," he warns.
Advertisement
But some runners in Delhi are not willing to put their health at risk. Aman Yadav, 32, has run the Airtel Delhi Half Marathon seven times, but he dropped out last year and is planning to drop out again this year.
Advertisement
COMMENTS
Advertisement
Delhi Pollution Under Control Centres Shut Amid Protest Over Fee Hike Delhi Government Increases PUC Certificate Fees For The First Time In 13 Years After 13 Years, Delhi Government Increases Cost Of Pollution Check Certificate Bangladesh Imposes Curfew, Deploys Military As 105 Die In Protests "Jindal Group Executive Showed Porn, Groped Me On Flight": Woman To NDTV Over 300 Indian Students Return Home As 105 Bangladeshis Killed In Protests Joe Biden Is The Best Person To Take On Trump, Says His Campaign Wife Among Two Jailed For Life For Man's Murder In Gurugram: Cops 1,100 Flights Cancelled In US As Microsoft Outage Disrupts Operations Track Latest News Live on NDTV.com and get news updates from India and around the world.