Just 7,000 daily steps can significantly lower risks of chronic diseases and early death. The Lancet study found this achievable target helps prevent heart disease, cancer, and dementia. While 10,000 steps remain ideal, 7,000 offers substantial benefits for less active individuals. Researchers suggest step counting as an easy way to track and improve health.
July 25, 2025
7,000 daily steps can cut your risk of cancer, depression, death: The Lancet
New Delhi, July 24: Just 7,000 daily steps
can be key to reducing your risk of developing a range of chronic diseases like
cancer, diabetes, and cognitive issues like depression, dementia, as well as
death, according to a new study published in the journal The Lancet Public
Health on Thursday.
Key
Points
1 7,000
steps reduce heart disease risk by 25%
2 Cuts
dementia risk by 38% and depression by 22%
3 Even
4,000 steps show benefits over inactivity
4 Study
analyzed 160,000 adults across 57 global studies
The comprehensive review, including 57
studies, analysed data from over 160,000 adults, and found that walking
approximately 7,000 steps per day is associated with reductions in the risk of
several serious health outcomes.
The 7,000 steps aided in reducing the risk of
cardiovascular disease (by 25 per cent), cancer (by 6 per cent), type 2
diabetes (by 14 per cent), dementia (by 38 per cent), depression (by 22 per
cent), and falls (by 28 per cent). The all-cause mortality was cut down by
nearly 50 per cent.
Notably, while the current unofficial target
of 10,000 steps per day, the study highlighted that 7,000 steps daily may be
more realistic, particularly for less active people.
“Although 10,000 steps per day can still be a
viable target for those who are more active, 7,000 steps per day is associated
with clinically meaningful improvements in health outcomes and might be a more
realistic and achievable target for some,” said corresponding author Prof Ding
Ding, from The Charles Perkins Centre, at The University of Sydney in
Australia.
The study also revealed that even modest step
counts (around 4,000 steps per day) are linked to better health compared to
very low activity (around 2,000 steps per day).
For some conditions, such as heart disease,
health benefits continued to increase beyond 7,000 steps, but for most
conditions, the benefits tended to level off.
However, the team also acknowledged
limitations, such as the small number of studies available, particularly for
cancer and dementia, and a lack of age-specific analysis and biases at the
individual study level.
Yet, the findings underscore the value of
using daily step counts as a straightforward way to measure physical activity,
the researchers said.
They suggest these results could help shape
future public health guidelines and recommendations, encouraging more people to
track their steps as a practical way to improve their health.
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment