If almost all of us started walking for an extra 10 minutes a day, we could, collectively, prevent more than 111,000 deaths every year, according to an enlightening new study of movement and mortality.
Published last week in JAMA Internal Medicine, the study used data about physical activity and death rates for thousands of American adults to estimate how many deaths every year might be avoided if everyone exercised more.
The results indicate that even a little extra physical activity by each of us could potentially stave off hundreds of thousands of premature deaths over the coming years.
A little additional physical activity can have a huge impact.Credit:iStock
Already, science offers plenty of evidence that how much we exercise influences how long we live. In a telling 2019 study published by the Centres for Disease Control and Prevention, more than 8 per cent of all deaths in the United States were attributed to “inadequate levels of activity.”
A British study from 2015 likewise found that men and women who exercised for at least 150 minutes per week – the standard recommendation in Britain, Europe and the US – reduced their risk of premature death by at least 25 per cent compared with people who exercised less.
More dramatically, a 2020 examination of the lifestyles and death risks of about 44,000 adults in the US and Europe concluded that the most sedentary men and women in the study, who sat almost all day, were as much as 260 per cent more likely to die prematurely as the most highly active people studied, who exercised for at least 30 minutes most days.
But much of this past research relied on people’s often unreliable memories of their exercise and sitting habits. In addition, many of the studies that delved into the broader, population-level effects of exercise on longevity tended to use formal exercise guidelines as their goal.
In those studies, researchers modelled what would happen if everyone started working out for at least 150 minutes a week, an ambitious and perhaps unachievable goal for the many people who previously have exercised rarely, if at all.
In the new US study, researchers at the National Cancer Institute and the CDC decided instead to explore what might happen to death rates if people started moving around more, even if they did not necessarily meet the formal exercise guidelines. But, first, the researchers needed to establish a baseline of how many deaths might be related to too-little movement. So, they began gathering data from the ongoing National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey, which periodically asks a representative sample of the population about their lives and health. It also provides some of them with activity trackers to objectively measure how much they move.
The researchers now pulled information from 4840 participants of different ethnicities, male and female, who ranged in age from 40 to 85. All had joined the survey between 2003 and 2006 and worn an activity monitor for a week. Based on that data, the researchers grouped people according to how many minutes they walked or otherwise moved most days. They also checked people’s names against a national death registry to establish mortality risks for the various activity levels.
Using those results, they began creating a series of statistical what-ifs. Suppose, the researchers asked, everyone who was capable of exercising began exercising moderately, such as by walking briskly, for an extra 10 minutes per day, on top of how much or little they currently worked out? How many deaths might not happen?
The researchers made adjustments to account statistically for those people who were too frail or otherwise unable to walk or easily move around. They also considered age, education, smoking status, diet, body mass index and other health factors in their calculations.
Then, the researchers ran the same statistical scenario with everyone working out for an extra 20 minutes a day and, finally, for an extra 30 minutes a day and checked the mortality outcomes.
Quite a few people would live longer in any of those scenarios, they found. According to the modelling, if every capable adult walked briskly or otherwise exercised for an additional 10 minutes a day, 111,174 deaths annually across the country – or about 7 per cent of all deaths in a typical year – might be avoided.
When they doubled the imagined exercise time to an extra 20 minutes a day, the number of potentially averted deaths rose to 209,459. Tripling the exercise to 30 extra minutes a day averted 272,297 deaths, or almost 17 per cent of typical annual totals. (The data was gathered before the pandemic, which has skewed mortality numbers.)
Those figures might seem abstract, but, in practice, those hundreds of thousands of deaths forestalled could turn out to be deeply personal. They could mean avoiding the early death of a spouse, parent, friend, grown child, co-worker or, of course, us, said Pedro Saint-Maurice, a public health researcher at the National Cancer Institute, who led the new study.
“There is a message in this data for public health entities” about the importance of promoting physical activity to reduce premature deaths, he said. And the message applies equally to each of us.
So get up and walk or engage in some kind of moderate physical activity for an extra 10 minutes today. Invite your friends, colleagues and ageing parents to do the same. “In this context, a little additional physical activity can have a huge impact,” Saint-Maurice said.
This article originally appeared in The New York Times.
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