Shoveling Boulder Snow: The Health Risks And When To Stop
Look Outside! It Snowed! It Snowed Concrete!
My mother was a great teacher. One of her skills was teaching me to worry. How good was she? I caught myself in a perfect mellow state worrying about what I was forgetting to worry about!!! Fact. Today my worrying centers on the dangers of shoveling snow. I don’t know which is more dangerous. Shoveling snow or sitting watching TV and thinking about shoveling. Either will get me in the end.
I’ve been accused of being a woos and worse for suggesting that someone as young as 40 might be getting too old for shoveling. Rather to be called names than to be dialing 911!
You may have noticed that it snowed concrete mashed potatoes yesterday. If you want to ski powder, this isn’t it. Snowballs are deadly weapons. Snowmen will last until March. The snow weighed as much as compressed lead. Shoveling heavy, wet snow poses significant health risks, particularly for older individuals, due to the intense physical exertion required.
Here’s why shoveling snow is especially medically exciting:
1. Cardiovascular Strain: Shoveling can dramatically increase heart rate and blood pressure. For older adults, particularly those with underlying cardiovascular conditions, this sudden increase in physical demand can lead to heart attacks.
2. Cold Weather Risks: Cold temperatures cause blood vessels to constrict, reducing blood flow and oxygen supply to the heart. This, combined with the physical strain of shoveling, heightens the risk of cardiac events.
3. Musculoskeletal Strain: The weight of wet snow increases the likelihood of back injuries, joint strain, and muscle tears, especially for those with decreased flexibility or pre-existing conditions like arthritis.
4. Reduced Physical Capacity: As people age, their cardiovascular and musculoskeletal systems may not perform as efficiently, making intense activities like snow shoveling riskier.
5. The most subtle risk, the one I find fascinating, is the bio-dynamic orientation of the body when shoveling. The motion itself compresses the heart and the lungs, exacerbating the risk of the activity.
Magic Age to Stop
There is no universally agreed-upon “magic age” for men or women to stop shoveling snow. However, many experts suggest that by age 50 to 60, people should reconsider heavy snow shoveling, especially if they have risk factors like:
– A history of heart disease or high blood pressure
– A sedentary lifestyle. You can watch shoveling snow on TV OR shovel the snow, but not both.
– Chronic joint or back issues and finally: A strong aversion to very hard work.
For those in good health and physically active, the age might vary. However, for safety, even healthy individuals over 50 should pace themselves, use ergonomic tools, or consider alternatives like hiring help or using a snowblower.
Having been a teenager once, during the last century, I think about 14 is too old to shovel snow, and it gets harder from there. It is child abuse, torturous, and unfortunately necessary in Boulder.
In our neighborhood, there is snowblower magic. Those of us who have snowblowers take turns, without having to organize it, running our magic machines around the block. There are few things more uplifting than looking out the front window and seeing that the sidewalk, in both directions, has been cleared. The is little more uplifting than being the one who got to the block’s sidewalks first. The Yiddish is mitzfah, or good deed. It is a win-win for the books!
Finally
When you see a brilliant, brave, praiseworthy neighbor running their magic machine past your house, consider bringing them a hot drink, a glass of water, or even a gas can to refill their snowblower.
Lenny Lensworth Frieling
Shared Knowledge Is Power!