In older adults, leisure time activities namely walking for exercise, jogging, swimming laps, or playing tennis, were found to lower mortality risk from any cause, according to a new study led by researchers at the National Cancer Institute, part of the National Institutes of Health.
The findings appear in JAMA Network Open.
‘Older adults to engage in leisure time activities that they enjoy and can sustain, because many types of these activities may lower the risk of death.’
Using data from 272,550 adults between the ages of 59 and 82 who had completed questionnaires about their leisure-time activities as part of the NIH-AARP Diet and Health Study, the researchers looked at whether participating in equivalent amounts of seven different exercise and recreational activitiesincluding running, cycling, swimming, other aerobic exercise, racquet sports, golf, and walking for exercisewas associated with lowered risk of death.
Leisure Time Physical Activity and Mortality
The researchers found that achieving the recommended amount of physical activity per week through any combination of these activities was associated with a 13% lower risk of death from any cause compared with no participation in these activities. When they looked at the role of each activity individually, playing racquet sports was associated with a 16% reduction in risk and running with a 15% reduction. However, all the activities investigated were similarly associated with lower risks of death.
The second edition of the Physical Activity Guidelines for Americans recommends that adults engage in 2.5 to 5 hours of moderate-intensity aerobic physical activity, or 1.25 to 2.5 hours of vigorous-intensity aerobic physical activity, each week.
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The levels of activity by the most active individuals (those who exceeded the recommended levels of physical activity) were associated with even greater reductions in the risk of death, but there were diminishing returns as activity levels increased. Even people who did some recreational activity, though less than the recommended amount, had a 5% reduction in risk of death than those who did not participate in any of the activities studied.
These activities were also associated with a lower risk of death from cardiovascular disease and cancer. Playing racquet sports was associated with the greatest reduction in risk of cardiovascular deaths (27% reduction), while running was associated with the greatest reduction in risk of cancer deaths (19% reduction).
Source: Eurekalert
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