Cape Times

7 000 – THE NUMBER OF DAILY STEPS YOU NEED TO REDUCE RISK OF PREMATURE DEATH

- ASIAN NEWS

ACCORDING to a new study, walking at least 7 000 steps a day reduced middle-aged people’s risk of premature death from all causes by 50% to 70%, compared to that of other middle-aged people who took fewer daily steps.

The findings of the study were published in the journal JAMA Network Open.

But walking more than 10 000 steps a day – or walking faster – did not further reduce the risk, noted lead author Amanda Paluch, a physical activity epidemiolo­gist at the University of Massachuse­tts Amherst.

The findings highlight the evolving efforts to establish evidence-based guidelines for simple, accessible physical activity that benefits health and longevity.

The oft-advised 10 000 steps a day is not a scientific­ally establishe­d guideline but emerged as part of a decades-old marketing campaign for a Japanese pedometer, said Paluch, assistant professor of kinesiolog­y in the School of Public Health and Health Sciences.

One question Paluch and colleagues wanted to begin to answer: How many steps a day do we need for health benefits?

“That would be great to know for a public health message or for clinician-patient communicat­ion,” she said.

The researcher­s mined data from the Coronary Artery Risk Developmen­t in Young Adults study, which began in 1985 and is ongoing.

About 2 100 participan­ts between age 38 and 50 wore an accelerome­ter in 2005 or 2006.

They were followed for nearly 11 years and the data were analysed in 2020 and 2021.

The participan­ts were separated into three groups: low-step volume (under 7 000 a day), moderate (between 7 000-9 999) and high (more than 10 000).

“You see this gradual risk reduction in mortality as you get more steps,” Paluch said.

“There were substantia­l health benefits between 7 000 and 10 000 steps but we didn’t see an additional benefit from going beyond 10 000.

“For people at 4 000 steps, getting to 5 000 is meaningful.

“And from 5 000 to 6 000 steps, there is an incrementa­l risk reduction in all-cause mortality up to about 10 000 steps,” Paluch explained.

Several features make this study particular­ly interestin­g.

For one, it involved people in middle age, while most step studies have been focused on older adults.

So the findings can begin to suggest ways to keep people healthier

longer and to avoid premature death, as some of the participan­ts experience­d.

“Preventing those deaths before average life expectancy – that is a big deal,” Paluch said. “Showing that steps per day could be associated with premature mortality is a new contributi­on to the field.”

The study also featured an equal number of men and women and black and white participan­ts.

Death rates for people walking at least 7 000 step a day were lowest among women and black people, compared to more sedentary peers.

But there was a limited sample of people who died, and Paluch cautions that researcher­s need to study larger diverse population­s to gauge statistica­lly significan­t sex and race difference­s.

Paluch is eager to continue researchin­g the impact of steps per day on health and how walking may be beneficial in a variety of ways at different life stages.

“We looked at just one outcome here – all-cause deaths. The associatio­n could look different depending on your outcome of interest,” she concluded.

 ?? | ANI ?? THE findings of the study were published in the journal JAMA Network Open.
| ANI THE findings of the study were published in the journal JAMA Network Open.

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