A 12-year study found that exercising
just 15 minutes a day can make a big difference in the health of older
adults, but 150 minutes is the ideal.
But you don't have to be a super
ripped animal as you get older like say,J.K. Simmons, to be healthy. All you
need is a brisk 15-minute walk a day to substantially reduce your risk of early
death, according to a large European study.
The European Society of Cardiology study
followed two cohorts of people – a group of 1,011 French people aged 65
for 12 years and 122, 417 subjects aged 60 for about a decade.
Compared to those who were inactive,
the participants who did low physical activity – things like
walking, weeding the garden, playing tennis or biking – reduced their
risk of early death by 22%. Those who did moderate activity lowered their
risk of death by 28% and those who who did high intensity activity reduced
their risk by 35%. The benefits maxed out at two hours and thirty minutes
of moderate activity per week.
"Age is not an excuse to do no
exercise," said David Hupin of the University Hospital of
Saint-Etienne in Saint-Etienne, France. "It is well established that regular
physical activity has a better overall effect on health than any medical
treatment. But less than half of older adults achieve the recommended minimum
of 150 minutes moderate intensity or 75 minutes vigorous intensity exercise
each week."
“Fifteen minutes a day could be a
reasonable target for older adults," Hupin added. "Small
increases in physical activity may enable some older adults to incorporate more
moderate activity and get closer to therecommended 150 minutes per week."
The lesson here is that it's never
too late to exercise, and every little bit counts. In fact, you might even be
able to get away with 10 minutes a day – the researchers found even those
600 seconds added some health benefit.
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