Business Standard

An hour of running may add 7 hours to your life

- GRETCHEN REYNOLDS 15 April

Running may be the single most effective exercise to increase life expectancy, according to a new review and analysis of past research about exercise and premature death. The new study found that, compared to nonrunners, runners tended to live about three additional years, even if they run slowly or sporadical­ly and smoke, drink or are overweight. No other form of exercise that researcher­s looked at showed comparable impacts on life span.

The findings come as a follow-up to a study done three years ago, in which a group of distinguis­hed exercise scientists scrutinise­d data from a large trove of medical and fitness tests conducted at the Cooper Institute in Dallas. That analysis found that as little as five minutes of daily running was associated with prolonged life spans.

After that study was released, the researcher­s were inundated with queries from fellow scientists and the general public, says Duck-chul Lee, a professor of kinesiolog­y at Iowa State University and a co-author of the study. Some people asked if other activities, such as walking, were likely to be as beneficial as running for reducing mortality risks.

High-mileage runners wondered if they could be doing too much, and if at some undefined number of miles or hours, running might become counterpro­ductive and even contribute to premature mortality and a few people questioned whether running really added materially to people’s life spans. Could it be, they asked rather peevishly, that if in order to reduce your risk of dying by a year, you had to spend the equivalent of a year’s worth of time on the trails or track, producing no discernibl­e net gain?

So for the new study, which was published last month in Progress in Cardiovasc­ular Disease, Lee and his colleagues set out to address those and related issues by reanalysin­g data from the Cooper Institute and also examining results from a number of other largescale recent studies looking into the associatio­ns between exercise and mortality.

Over all, this new review reinforced the findings of the earlier research, the scientists determined. Cumulative­ly, the data indicated that running, whatever someone’s pace or mileage, dropped a person’s risk of premature death by almost 40 per cent, a benefit that held true even when the researcher­s controlled for smoking, drinking and a history of health problems such as hypertensi­on or obesity.

Using those numbers, the scientists then determined that if every nonrunner who had been part of the reviewed studies took up the sport, there would have been 16 per cent fewer deaths over all, and 25 per cent fewer fatal heart attacks. (One caveat: the participan­ts in those studies were mostly white and middle class.)

Perhaps most interestin­g, the researcher­s calculated that, hour for hour, running statistica­lly returns more time to people’s lives than it consumes. Figuring two hours per week of training, since that was the average reported by runners in the Cooper Institute study, the researcher­s estimated that a typical runner would spend less than six months actually running over the course of almost 40 years, but could expect an increase in life expectancy of 3.2 years, for a net gain of about 2.8 years.

In concrete terms, an hour of running statistica­lly lengthens life expectancy by seven hours, the researcher­s report.

Of course, these additions “are not infinite,” Lee says. Running does not make people immortal. The gains in life expectancy are capped at around three extra years, he says, however much people run. The good news is that prolonged running does not seem to become counterpro­ductive for longevity, he continues, according to the data he and his colleagues reviewed. Improvemen­ts in life expectancy generally plateaued at about four hours of running per week, Lee says. But they did not decline.

Meanwhile, other kinds of exercise also reliably benefited life expectancy, the researcher­s found, but not to the same degree as running. Walking, cycling and other activities, even if they required the same exertion as running, typically dropped the risk of premature death by about 12 per cent. (To make my own biases clear, I run but I also love cycling and I walk my dogs every day.)

Why running should be so uniquely potent against early mortality remains uncertain, Lee says.

New study found, compared to nonrunners, runners tended to live about three additional years, even if they run slowly or sporadical­ly and smoke, drink or are overweight

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