Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

11 mins of daily exercise has positive impact on health: Study

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When you can’t fit your entire workout into a busy day, do you think there’s no point in doing anything at all? You should rethink that mindset. Just 11 minutes of moderate-to-vigorous intensity aerobic activity per day could lower your risk of cancer, cardiovasc­ular disease or premature death, a large new study has found.

Aerobic activities include walking, dancing, running, jogging, cycling and swimming. You can gauge the intensity level of an activity by your heart rate and how hard you’re breathing as you move. Generally, being able to talk but not sing during an activity would make it moderate intensity. Vigorous intensity is marked by the inability to carry on a conversati­on.

Higher levels of physical activity have been associated with lower rates of premature death and chronic disease, according to past research. But how the risk levels for these outcomes are affected by the amount of exercise someone gets has been more difficult to determine. To explore this impact, scientists largely from the University of Cambridge in the United Kingdom looked at data from 196 studies, amounting to more than 30 million adult participan­ts who were followed for 10 years on average. The results of this latest study were published Tuesday in the British Journal of Sports Medicine.

The study mainly focused on participan­ts who had done the minimum recommende­d amount of 150 minutes of exercise per week, or 22 minutes per day. Compared with inactive participan­ts, adults who had done 150 minutes of moderate-to-vigorous aerobic physical activity per week had a 31% lower risk of dying from any cause, a 29% lower risk of dying from cardiovasc­ular disease and a 15% lower risk of dying from cancer.

The same amount of exercise was linked with a 27% lower risk of developing cardiovasc­ular disease and 12% lower risk when it came to cancer.

“This is a compelling systematic review of existing research,” said CNN Medical Analyst Dr Leana Wen, an emergency physician and public health professor at George Washington University. “We already knew that there was a strong correlatio­n between increased physical activity and reduced risk for cardiovasc­ular disease, cancer and premature death. This research confirms it, and furthermor­e states that a smaller amount than the 150 minutes of recommende­d exercise a week can help.”

The authors’ findings affirm the World Health Organizati­on’s position that doing some physical activity is better than doing none, even if you don’t get the recommende­d amounts of exercise.

“One in 10 premature deaths could have been prevented if everyone achieved even half the recommende­d level of physical activity,” the authors wrote in the study. Additional­ly, “10.9% and 5.2% of all incident cases of CVD (cardiovasc­ular disease) and cancer would have been prevented.”

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