30 minutes of daily walk curbs death risk from heart diseases

30 minutes of daily walk curbs death risk from heart diseases
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30 minutes of daily walk curbs death risk from heart diseases. Just half an hour of brisk walking five days a week can reduce risk of death from cardiovascular diseases, especially in women and those younger than 70 years of age, says a new study.

All about exercise!

Just half an hour of brisk walking five days a week can reduce risk of death from cardiovascular diseases, especially in women and those younger than 70 years of age, says a new study.

"Our findings have public health implications and emphasise the importance of women in particular being more physically active," said one of the researchers Roberto Peidro, vice president of the Argentine Foundation of Cardiology.

The study investigated the impact of various levels of physical activity on death from ischaemic heart disease (IHD) and stroke and on total cardiovascular mortality in people aged 30 years and older.

Physical activity was categorised by metabolic equivalent tasks per minute per week (MET/minute/week), with 600 MET/min/week being equivalent to 30 minutes of brisk walking five days a week.

The researchers found that engaging in less than 600 MET/min/week was responsible for 17 percent (7,278) of total cardiovascular deaths in Argentina in 2010, of which 3,941 occurred in men and 3,337 in women.

Doing less than 600 MET/min/week was responsible for 20 percent (4 907) of deaths from IHD and 13 percent (2,371) of stroke deaths. Data on physical activity was obtained from the Argentinian national survey of risk factors in 2013.

Numbers of disease-specific deaths in 2010 came from the Ministry of Health in Argentina. "This research demonstrates that the impact of physical inactivity on deaths from cardiovascular disease is very significant,” Peidro said:

"The causes of lower physical activity in women, according to surveys, include their multiple occupations (work and home), less time spent doing sports by girls compared to boys, and the time spent caring for the health of other family members," Peidro pointed out. (The findings appeared in the European Heart Journal.)

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