How Weekend Exercise Reduces Risk Of Early Death - Experts

In an effort to make more people improve their health, scientists have revealed that cramming all recommended weekly exercise into one or two weekend sessions is enough to produce important health benefits.
These are contained in a report published in ‘JAMA Internal Medicine’. According to the report, being active without managing 150 minutes of moderate activity a week was still enough to reduce the risk of an early death by a third.
Health experts said purposeful exercise was key to better health. The researchers said this was good news for people with a busy lifestyle who turned into “weekend warriors” in order to fit in all their recommended physical activity.
The findings are based on a survey of about 64,000 adults aged over 40 in England and Scotland. Researchers from Loughborough University and the University of Sydney analysed data on the time people spent doing exercise and their health over 18 years.
They found that no matter how often people exercised in a week or for how long, the health benefits were similar as long as they met the activity guidelines.
Exercise is the physical exertion of the body – making the body do a physical activity which results in a healthy or healthier level of physical fitness and both physical and mental health.
The health benefits of regular exercise and physical activity are hard to ignore. Everyone benefits from exercise, regardless of age, sex or physical ability. Compared with those who didn’t exercise at all, people who did some kind of physical activity – whether regularly or irregularly – showed a lower risk of dying from cancer and from cardiovascular disease (CVD), which can lead to heart attacks and strokes.
“Weekend warriors”, who did all their exercise on one or two days of the week, were found to lower their risk of dying from CVD by 41 per cent and cancer by 18 per cent, compared with the inactive.
Those who exercised regularly on three or more days per week reduced their risks by 41 per cent and 21 per cent.
Even the “insufficiently active” lowered their risk by a significant amount – 37 per cent and 14 per cent, the researchers said.
Reacting to the development, Study author and expert in physical activity and health, Dr. Gary O’Donovan, who is from Loughborough University, said the key was doing exercise that was “purposeful, and done with the intention of improving health.”

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