Current recommendations call for adults to do at least 150 minutes, or a total of 1.5 hours, of physical activity weekly.I wonder if moving the recliner back and forth while pressing the tv remote counts as exercise.
But the new study finds that doing even half that — 15 minutes daily is about 105 minutes a week — still provides benefits.
The study included more than 400,000 people in Taiwan who were followed for an average of eight years.
The people in the low-activity group exercised for an average of 92 minutes per week, or just under 15 minutes a day. Compared to those in the inactive group — who did almost no physical activity — those in the low-activity group were 14 percent less likely to die from any cause, 10 percent less likely to die of cancer, and had a three-year longer life expectancy, on average.
Every additional 15 minutes of daily exercise beyond the minimum 15 minutes further reduced the risk of all-cause death by 4 percent and the risk of cancer death by 1 percent.
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Thursday, August 18, 2011
Getting Enough Exercise
A study published in Lancet this week has great news for exercise-phobes and those too busy to do a regular workout: