Daily Walking Steps for
a Longevity Benefit
It’s fewer than 10,000 steps, especially for older adults
From: University of Massachusetts Amherst
March
3, 2022 -- A meta-analysis of 15 studies involving nearly 50,000 people from
four continents offers new insights into identifying the amount of daily
walking steps that will optimally improve adults' health and longevity -- and
whether the number of steps is different for people of different ages.
The analysis represents
an effort to develop an evidence-based public health message about the benefits
of physical activity. The oft-repeated 10,000-steps-a-day mantra grew out of a
decades-old marketing campaign for a Japanese pedometer, with no science to
back up the impact on health.
Led by University of
Massachusetts Amherst physical activity epidemiologist Amanda Paluch, an
international group of scientists who formed the Steps for Health Collaborative
found that taking more steps a day helps lower the risk of premature death. The
findings are reported in a paper published March 2 in Lancet Public Health.
More specifically, for
adults 60 and older, the risk of premature death leveled off at about
6,000-8,000 steps per day, meaning that more steps than that provided no
additional benefit for longevity. Adults younger than 60 saw the risk of
premature death stabilize at about 8,000-10,000 steps per day.
"So, what we saw
was this incremental reduction in risk as steps increase, until it levels
off," Paluch says. "And the leveling occurred at different step
values for older versus younger adults."
Interestingly, the
research found no definitive association with walking speed, beyond the total number
of steps per day, Paluch notes. Getting in your steps -- regardless of the pace
at which you walked them -- was the link to a lower risk of death.
The new research
supports and expands findings from another study led by Paluch, published last
September in JAMA Network Open, which found that walking at least 7,000 steps a
day reduced middle-aged people's risk of premature death.
The Physical Activity
Guidelines for Americans, updated in 2018, recommends adults get at least 150
minutes of moderate-intensity aerobic physical activity each week. Paluch is
among the researchers seeking to help establish the evidence base to guide
recommendations for simple, accessible physical activity, such as walking.
"Steps are very
simple to track, and there is a rapid growth of fitness tracking devices,"
Paluch says. "It's such a clear communication tool for public health
messaging."
The research group
combined the evidence from 15 studies that investigated the effect of daily
steps on all-cause mortality among adults age 18 and older. They grouped the
nearly 50,000 participants into four comparative groups according to average
steps per day. The lowest step group averaged 3,500 steps; the second, 5,800;
the third, 7,800; and the fourth, 10,900 steps per day.
Among the three higher
active groups who got more steps a day, there was a 40-53% lower risk of death,
compared to the lowest quartile group who walked fewer steps, according to the
meta-analysis.
"The major
takeaway is there's a lot of evidence suggesting that moving even a little more
is beneficial, particularly for those who are doing very little activity,"
Paluch says. "More steps per day are better for your health. And the
benefit in terms of mortality risk levels off around 6,000 to 8,000 for older adults
and 8,000 to 10,000 for younger adults."
https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2022/03/220303112207.htm
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