‘40% lower death risk’ for fit elderly men
ELDERLY men who do 30 minutes of physical activity six days a week are likely to have a 40 percent lower risk of death compared to couch-potato counterparts, researchers said yesterday.
For men in this age group, just a small amount of regular exercise — regardless of intensity — is as beneficial as giving up smoking, they said.
The evidence comes from a major project in Norway called the Oslo Study. In it, doctors enrolled thousands of men born between 1923 and 1932, who were given health checkups and volunteered information about their lifestyle and physical activity.
The initiative was launched in 1972-3 with a first survey among nearly 15,000 men.
In 2000, the survey was repeated among the group, of whom 12,700 had survived.
Of these, 5,700 were able or willing to continue in the research. By 2011, deaths reduced this total to 3,600.
The researchers were struck by the impact of regular physical exercise during the 2000-2011 period, when the volunteers were aged in their seventies or eighties.
“A mortality reduction of 40 percent was associated with a moderate use of time (30 minutes, six days a week) irrespective of whether the activity was light or vigorous,” their study said.
Among those who exercised vigorously — defined as hard training several times a week — the lifespan was a whopping five years longer than among those who were sedentary.
The study, led by Professor Ingar Holme of Norwegian School of Sports Sciences, is published online in the British Journal of Sports Medicine.
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