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Even 15 Minutes Of Daily Exercise Can Add 3 Years To Your Life: Study

AP/Huffington Post   First Posted: 08/16/11 12:06 PM ET Updated: 10/16/11 06:12 AM ET

LOS ANGELES (AP) -- Don't despair if you can't fit in the recommended 30 minutes of daily exercise. Growing evidence suggests that even half that much can help.

It's still no excuse to slack off. Regular exercise strengthens muscles, reduces the risk of some diseases and promotes mental well-being. The more exercise, the better.

But not everyone has the time or willpower. So researchers set out to find the minimum amount of physical activity needed to reap health benefits. The findings by a study in Taiwan suggest just 15 minutes of moderate exercise a day can lead to a longer life.

This "may convince many individuals that they are able to incorporate physical activity into their busy lives," Dr. Anil Nigam of the University of Montreal said in an email. Nigam had no role in the research but wrote an editorial accompanying the Taiwan study published online Monday in The Lancet.

Fitness guidelines by the World Health Organization, the U.S. and other countries recommend that adults get at least a half-hour of moderate workout most days of the week. This can include brisk walking, bike riding and water aerobics.

Realizing that it might be difficult for some to break a sweat, health groups have suggested breaking it down into smaller, more manageable chunks of time such as three 10-minute spurts a day on weekdays.

The latest study, a large one led by researchers at the National Health Research Institutes in Taiwan, sought to determine if exercising less than the recommended half-hour was still helpful.

The researchers noted that east Asians – including China, Japan and Taiwan – are generally less physically active than their Western counterparts and their workouts tend to be less intense.

About 416,000 Taiwanese adults were asked how much exercise they did the previous month. Based on their answers, they were put into five groups of varying activity levels from inactive to highly active. Researchers kept track of their progress for eight years on average and calculated projected life expectancy.

The study found those who exercised just 15 minutes a day – or 90 minutes a week – cut their risk of death by 14 percent and extended their life expectancy by three years compared with those who did no exercise. Both men and women benefited equally from the minimum activity.

Each additional 15 minutes of exercise reduced the risk of death by another 4 percent compared with the inactive group. Researchers did not report how additional exercise affected life expectancy.

There were some limitations. Answers were self-reported. The study, though large, was observational, which means the health benefits may not be entirely due to exercise. But researchers said they took into account other factors that might affect health such as smoking and drinking. And outside scientists said the findings are in line with other studies.

For the sedentary, the key is this: Some exercise is better than none.

"Get off the couch and start moving," said I-Min Lee of the Harvard School of Public Health.

In a study published in Circulation earlier this month, Lee and colleagues found that people who engaged in 15 minutes a day of moderate physical activity had a 14 percent lower risk of heart disease compared with inactive people.

That research, combining the results of nearly three dozen studies of people from North America and Europe, also found that the benefit increased with more activity and may provide more motivation to the physically fit.

People should strive to do the recommended level of exercise, but should not be discouraged if they can't achieve it right away. Start slow and gradually build up.

"As inactive persons start moving, they may very well find that they become more fit" and reaching their exercise goal becomes easier, Lee said.

Until a year ago, Bernadette O'Brien, a retired principal who lives in northern New Jersey, did not make time for exercise. She would occasionally walk around her neighborhood and swim in the pool at her local gym, but she did little else.

After the 80-year-old was diagnosed with diabetes, she decided to change her habits. Now O'Brien exercises between 15 and 45 minutes a day, five days a week. She mixes up her routine with water aerobics and strength training so she won't get bored.

"I feel healthy and energetic. And my balance is pretty good," she said.

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LOS ANGELES (AP) -- Don't despair if you can't fit in the recommended 30 minutes of daily exercise. Growing evidence suggests that even half that much can help. It's still no excuse to slack off. R...
LOS ANGELES (AP) -- Don't despair if you can't fit in the recommended 30 minutes of daily exercise. Growing evidence suggests that even half that much can help. It's still no excuse to slack off. R...
 
 
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03:44 PM on 08/16/2011
This is good news for those of us who don't make time for exercise. It is difficult to schedule time for it.
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mcartri
03:12 PM on 08/16/2011
Why don't they have subtitles when people are speaking in foreign languages? I didn't understand a work of it? What language were they speaking for goodness sake?
02:38 PM on 08/16/2011
It may not add years to your life but regular exercise will certainly add life to the years you have left. Either way its a win win deal so get moving.
02:34 PM on 08/16/2011
If 15 minutes of exercise a day adds 3 years of life, I think I'll start when the doctor says I have 6 months to live. That would be a good cost to benefit ratio.

Really, without knowing the life expectancy benefit for starting this when you're 25 vs. 45 vs. 65, this doesn't seem like an informative statistic.
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kcmookie
This is like a bad habit.....
03:10 PM on 08/16/2011
You fail. Maybe you should move beyond superficial math if you are going to make a counter theory. Even if you started at 25, and live to 85, your cumulative time spent exercising would equal 228.12 days--or less than 1 year.

The return is ridiculously good regardless of when you start.
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mcartri
03:14 PM on 08/16/2011
More people are struck by vehicles while jogging than those at home on a sofa. Think about that!
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h jablome
My micro-bio is empty? Your micro-bio is emptier!
02:30 PM on 08/16/2011
another 3 years? of this crap?
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Bogey907
Mongo only pawn... in game of life
02:09 PM on 08/16/2011
Does 15 minutes of the horizontal bop count?
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pranalisa
mom,yoga teacher,holistic nutritionist,junk dealer
03:47 PM on 08/16/2011
yes
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Bogey907
Mongo only pawn... in game of life
04:26 PM on 08/16/2011
Good. :)
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PatientZeroBeat
Dying since 1962
01:35 PM on 08/16/2011
Why the hell are there NEW studies that prove that exercise can lead to a longer healthier life? Hasn't that been settled long ago? They should just reprint the old studies with a little note that say "Yep, that's still true".

It should be blatantly obvious that 15 minutes of exercise isn't as robust as 30 minutes but it's way better than zero.
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newworldman777
What would our future 7th generation think of us?
01:27 PM on 08/16/2011
I recently completed a successful workable model of my "running machine" invention, which is the culmination of 20 years of work, including designing and constructing several models over the years. Runners/joggers wear it while actually running (unlike what they do with machines like treadmills, on which they remain stationary), and it possesses a number of accessories for aiding runners. Hopefully, I will soon be able to patent it and introduce it to market. Maybe it will encourage many people (who would not ordinarily do so) to get out there and exercise.
01:22 PM on 08/16/2011
Considering that the joggers in the picture are getting ready to run through "Naked City" on the north end of Las Vegas Blvd, they better pick up the pace. It is not the best stretch of road for the next mile or so.
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seehowtheyrun
I have a dog and I vote.
01:12 PM on 08/16/2011
Just keep moving !
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frank day
Republican = FAIL
01:10 PM on 08/16/2011
Move !!!!!!!!!!
01:08 PM on 08/16/2011
You will have spend those 3 years exercising.
12:55 PM on 08/16/2011
Does walking a total 15min a day count?
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RusStyles
12:52 PM on 08/16/2011
15 minutes beats 0 minute, but if you really want to hit the key five areas of fitness--muscle strength, core development, cardio endurance, flexibility, balance--it's unlikely to happen in 15 minutes/day, especially if you have sit-on-your-butt-all-day job.
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mcartri
03:17 PM on 08/16/2011
Always jog in place in buffet lines. Jogging for 2-hours will use the calories in 1/4 cookie. Jog across the USA and it will equal all the calories from a typical buffet.
04:13 PM on 08/16/2011
Just in case somebody actually believes your numbers--jogging a mile burns, at a minimum, 100 kilocalories (the actual unit employed by heat engineers--it's what the diets call "calories"). So jogging across the U. S. would burn on the order of 300,000 "calories," or, since you have to burn about 3200 "calories" to lose a pound, nearly one hundred pounds.

If you jogged in place for two hours, you would burn, at a minimum, on the order of 800 "calories." So if that represents the "calories" in 1/4 cookie, the cookie must have at least 3200 "calories." Or, in other words, about as many "calories" as you would need to burn to lose a pound. Some cookie.

All the pseudo-clever responses from those who do not exercise are beside the point. This is not a matter settled by opinion. This is the way it is, and you can make all the fun of it you wish. Won't do your heart any good.

As far as I am concerned, non-exercisers are welcome to stick to their habits and get their results, and I will stick to mine.

And by the way, I've been working out aerobically for over fifty years. Never even came close to being hit by a truck. In fact, I would say I appear to be more watchful about such things than most couch potatoes.