For immediate release
July 30, 2009
MORTALITY LINKED TO
PHYSICAL ACTIVITY LEVELS IN UNFIT INDIVIDUALS
INDIANAPOLIS – The least-fit segment of the population has
twice the mortality risk of even those who are just a bit more in shape,
according to a study published in the official journal of
the American College of
Sports Medicine.
A research team from Stanford University led by Victor F. Froelicher, M.D., and Jonathan Myers,
Ph.D., FACSM, performed exercise tests and followed more than 4,300
subjects from 1986 to 2006, none of whom had a history of heart disease.
Fitness and physical activity levels were measured using treadmill tests
and questionnaires, and mortality rates were tracked during the 20-year
study period.
Sandra Mandic, Ph.D., and the research team
from Stanford analyzed the results, and found that the mortality rate
for the least-fit individuals was twice that of the second least-fit
group, and more than four times the rate of the most-fit group. Fitness
was the strongest predictor of mortality in this group of healthy
individuals.
The study suggests that reduced recent physical
activity, rather than differences in health status, contributes to the
striking difference in mortality rates between the least-fit individuals
and those who are just a bit more fit. Nearly two-thirds of the
least-fit individuals were not meeting the minimum recommended amount of
physical activity (at least 150 minutes per week, or 30 minutes per day,
five days per week). Yet, this group achieves the greatest health
benefits from increasing fitness.
“Given the considerable survival benefit
associated with improving fitness in the least-fit group, increasing
fitness through regular physical activity should be a priority in unfit
individuals,” Mandic said. “Health professionals should
consider a sedentary lifestyle and poor fitness as treatable and major
risk factors.”
The study’s findings are consistent
with Exercise is Medicine™, a multi-organizational effort to make physical
activity a standard part of the health care paradigm. The program
encourages health care providers to talk to their patients about
physical activity and, conversely, for patients to talk to their
physician about how to get active.
The American College of Sports Medicine
is the largest sports medicine and exercise
science organization in the world. More than 35,000 international,
national and regional members and certified professionals are dedicated
to advancing and integrating scientific research to provide educational
and practical applications of exercise science and sports
medicine.
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NOTE: Medicine
& Science in Sports & Exercise® is the official journal of
the American College of
Sports Medicine, and is available from
Lippincott Williams & Wilkins at 1-800-638-6423. For a complete copy
of the research paper (Vol. 41, No. 8, pages 1573-1579) or to speak with
the author or an expert on the topic, contact the Department of
Communications and Public Information at 317-637-9200 ext. 127 or 133.
Visit ACSM online at www.acsm.org.
The conclusions outlined in this news release
are those of the researchers only, and should not be construed as an
official statement of theAmerican
College of Sports Medicine.
| mortality, unfit individuals, fitness levels and death, sedentary lifestyle, least-fit individuals, low fitness |
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