Longterm Benefits of Exercise – Increasing Activity for Longevity

Here’s What Starting to Exercise Now Does to Your Health Over a Decade Later

Just started a new exercise program? Not only will you start feeling better now, but you also may be setting your body up for some serious benefits in the years that come, according to a study in BMJ (Physical activity trajectories and mortality: population based cohort study)

In the study, researchers analyzed the self-reported exercise habits of nearly 14600 participants ages 40 to 79 over the course of nearly eight years to see how their exercise levels changed, and to measure how it affected their health. Then, 13 years after the study began, they checked in again and found that over 3,100 of the participants had died. Of the 3,334 participants who did not do any exercise at the start of the study, one-third increased their activity levels to meet the recommended 150 minutes per week of moderate intensity physical activity over the course of the nearly eight-year follow up. These people were 24 percent less likely to die over the course of the follow up than those who stayed inactive.Increasing their sweat time to meet these minimum weekly requirements also made them 29 percent less likely to die from cardiovascular disease and 11 percent less likely to die from cancer.

Those who were initially active above the 150 minutes per week mark, but dropped off their workout habits to just hit the minimum by the end of the follow up still saw a 20 percent lower all-cause mortality risk than those who remained inactive.

As for those who were already active and become even more active? They gained the greatest health benefit: Those who increased their exercise to two or three times the recommended 150 minutes—what the most active group in the study did—were 42 percent less likely to die over follow up than those who were always inactive.

Unlike some previous studies which found negative health effects of too much exercise, this study showed only positive benefits to increasing activity—a helpful finding for those who already make it a point to fit in a regular run, but want to do more to boost their health.

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