A recent study suggested that even fit women can’t do pull ups (or chin ups), and it went on to explain why. Although it’s obviously more challenging for women to perform pull ups than it is for men (due to differences in muscle mass and leverage), I do have some concerns with how this poorly designed study was conducted.  First of all, according to the New York Times, here is the basic outline of the study:

“The Dayton researchers recruited 17 women of normal weight who were unable to perform a single pull-up. They then trained them for three months, prescribing exercises to strengthen their upper bodies, improve their aerobic fitness and lower their body fat.

All that training produced results: the women’s upper-body strength increased by 36 per cent and their body fat was reduced by 2 per cent. But they failed to produce the main result researchers were looking for: only four of the 17 women were able to perform a pull-up.”

=> Source: Why Women Can’t Do Pull Ups (New York Times)

Click the link above to learn more about how they performed the study.

As you will read in this 3 month study, the women did exercises for their biceps and lats (big back muscles), as well as using a modified “inclined” pullup machine.  They also performed aerobic exercise to reduce body fat.  Here is my commentary on this study:

  • To improve your ability to perform pull ups or chin ups, you need to actually perform variations of that exercise.  Body weight exercises such as pull ups, dips, push ups, etc, are a learned skill… there is a strong technical component to getting good at these exercises, and you need to train your neural-muscular system to learn the technique. Just doing bicep curls and lat pulldowns won’t cut it.  Even the “incline slide-board” pullups don’t teach your body how to do an actual hanging pull up. You need to incorporate specific pull up progressions.  In the video below I demonstrate a series of exercise progressions for the beginner to work up to doing chin ups and pull ups. These include negatives (eccentric reps), static holds, jumping pullups, partial range repetitions, assisted reps, etc.

 

  • Most aerobic exercise (ie: long, slow, steady-state cardio) is not the best way to lose body fat.  However, aerobics will lead to LOSS of lean MUSCLE tissue and will reduce the maximal strength necessary for women to perform a pull up.  Resistance training, along with HIIT used sparingly, and nutrition are the best ways to reduce body fat without losing muscle or strength.
  • This study says it involved women of “normal weight”. Depending on where this study was conducted, what is considered “normal weight” for women can vary greatly.  To be able to do pull ups a women is going to need to lose any extra body fat. They need to differentiate “lean” and “fit” and be clear about what standard they are using.

 

To sum up, here is a video of one of my friends and clients, Giselle, doing several pull up repetitions.  When she started training she was fit but she couldn’t do a single one. I also have several other female clients who can perform chin ups. In fact, Giselle is a personal trainer as well and she ALSO has a couple of female clients who are doing chin ups.

 

This makes me question the strength training “expertise” of the “experts” conducting this study.  It suggests that a professor of exercise physiology may not have the same practical “under the bar” experience and background as a seasoned strength coach.  Regardless, it just goes to show what one can accomplish when they apply the correct training and nutrition strategies. Next time you read a study that suggests you can’t do something, use that as motivation to go out and do it!