Brisk walk a day cuts early death risk

Make sure to go for a brisk walk daily, for a new study says a brisk 20-minute walk each day can add years to your life.

Zee Media Bureau

New Delhi: Make sure to go for a brisk walk daily, for a new study says a brisk 20-minute walk each day can add years to your life.

Researchers at University of Cambridge have carried out a study analysing over 334,000 European men and women and found that brisk walking for 20 minutes daily can actually make a difference.

The study also found that twice as many deaths may be attributable to lack of physical activity compared with the number of deaths attributable to obesity.

Professor Ulf Ekelund from the Medical Research Council (MRC) epidemiology unit at University of Cambridge was quoted as saying: “We found that just 20 minutes would make a difference. Physical activity has many proven health benefits and should be an important part of our daily life”.

For this, researchers analysed data across Europe participating in the European Prospective Investigation into Cancer and Nutrition (EPIC) Study.

Over an average of 12 years, the researchers measured height, weight and waist circumference and used self-assessment to measure levels of physical activity.

The researchers found that the greatest reduction in risk of premature death occurred in the comparison between inactive and moderately inactive groups, judged by combining activity at work with recreational activity.

"Doing exercise equivalent to just a 20 minute brisk walk each day would take an individual from the inactive to moderately inactive group and reduce their risk of premature death by between 16-30 percent," the authors noted.

The impact was greatest among normal weight individuals but even those with higher BMI saw a benefit.

Using the most recent available data on deaths in Europe, the team estimated that 337,000 of the 9.2 million deaths amongst European men and women were attributable to obesity.

However, double this number of deaths (676,000) could be attributed to physical inactivity.

"Encouraging people to make small but achievable changes in physical activity can have significant health benefits and may be easier to achieve and maintain," added professor Nick Wareham, director of the MRC Unit.

The results were published in the American Journal of Clinical Nutrition.

(With Agency inputs)

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