If you were about to force yourself out on a run, stop where you are for a minute because a bath might be just as effective as exercise when it comes to your health.

Dr Steve Faulkner, a researcher at Loughborough University, says it may even have similar benefits to exercising–helping to prevent type 2 diabetes.

He explained to The Conversation that, though a hot bath has always been relaxing, it is only recently that science has begun to discover how 'passive heating' can improve health.

Dr Faulkner and his team have investigated the effect a hot bath has on blood sugar control and the number of calories burned. The study involved 14 people each enjoying an hour-long soak in a bath run at 104 degrees Fahrenheit as well as heading out on a hour's cycle.

The two tests were designed to raise core body temperature by just one degree so that the team could measure how many calories were burned in each session.

Though cycling did burn more calories, they found that a hot bath used up as many calories as a 30-minute walk.

'The overall blood sugar response to both conditions was similar, but peak blood sugar after eating was about 10% lower when participants took a hot bath compared with when they exercised,' Dr Faulkner reports.

He also explained that the anti-inflammatory properties of exercise are important for our immune systems and help us fight diseases: 'This suggests that repeated passive heating may contribute to reducing chronic inflammation, which is often present with long-term diseases, such as type 2 diabetes'.

So, take off those sneakers–in fact, take off everything and head upstairs.

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