Thursday, April 16, 2015

How Much Should You Exercise?

For once, here’s some news you can use.

New research answers that age-old question: how much exercise should you do to improve your health and to live longer? 

The New York Times reports the findings:

They found that, unsurprisingly, the people who did not exercise at all were at the highest risk of early death.

But those who exercised a little, not meeting the recommendations but doing something, lowered their risk of premature death by 20 percent.

Those who met the guidelines precisely, completing 150 minutes per week of moderate exercise, enjoyed greater longevity benefits and 31 percent less risk of dying during the 14-year period compared with those who never exercised.

The sweet spot for exercise benefits, however, came among those who tripled the recommended level of exercise, working out moderately, mostly by walking, for 450 minutes per week, or a little more than an hour per day. Those people were 39 percent less likely to die prematurely than people who never exercised.

At that point, the benefits plateaued, the researchers found, but they never significantly declined. Those few individuals engaging in 10 times or more the recommended exercise dose gained about the same reduction in mortality risk as people who simply met the guidelines. They did not gain significantly more health bang for all of those additional hours spent sweating. But they also did not increase their risk of dying young.


The answer is: about an hour a day of moderate exercise will significantly improve your health and increase your longevity. If you want to do a lot more than that, be their guest. Too much exercise will not appreciably change the calculus, in either direction.

1 comment:

Ares Olympus said...

Looks good to me. At least my bike commuting, if 5 days, would be 250 minutes/week, while not very high effort with traffic, and my running average about 175 minutes/week, but some of that replaces biking.

Unfortunately other studies say you can't just sit all day when you're not exercising. Dang desk jobs!

I have a coworker with a desk treadmill, walks 1 mph, using it 6 hours/day on average. He hasn't figure out how to do treadmill meeetings yet.
http://www.mindbodygreen.com/0-15004/sitting-all-day-is-really-really-bad-for-you-infographic.html