Fifteen minutes’ exercise a day can boost life expectancy

A cheering piece of research suggests that just 15 minutes of exercise a day – half the recommended amount in the UK – can boost life expectancy.

A study in Taiwan, reported in The Lancet, tracked more than 400,000 men and women over 12 years, and showed significant benefits from 15 minutes a day or 90 minutes a week of moderate exercise such as brisk walking. The UK government currently recommends that adults get 150 minutes of exercise a week.

The Taiwanese study found that compared with the inactive group in the study, the exercisers had a three-year longer life expectancy, and reduced their mortality risk by 14%.

Dr Chi-Pang Wen, lead author of the study, told ABC News that 30 minutes a day for five or more days a week remained the golden rule, but half that could still be very beneficial. “Finding a slot of 15 minutes is much easier than finding a 30-minute slot in most days of the week.”

The researchers also found that people who did some exercise tended to get a taste for it and do more – every additional 15 minutes reduced all cause death risks by another 4%.

England’s chief medical officer, Sally Davies, told the BBC the study would remind people there were many ways of getting exercise, “activities like walking at a good pace or digging the garden can count too”.

Source: Read Full Article