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Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
A Brief Colonial History Of Ceylon(SriLanka)
Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
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Thiranjala Weerasinghe sj.- One Island Two Nations
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Wednesday, July 30, 2014
Study: Running May Add 3 Years to Your Life
Current U.S. guidelines for physical activity call for a minimum of 75
minutes per week of running or other vigorous-intensity aerobic
activity, or 30 minutes of moderate-intensity exercise most days of the
week.
Runners may live an average three years longer than people who don't run, according to new research. Photo Courtesy: AARP
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(AMES, Iowa) - Runners may live an average three years longer than people who don't run, according to new research.
But, the best news from this study is that it appears that you can reap
this benefit even if you run at slow speeds for mere minutes every day,
the 15-year study suggests.
"People may not need to run a lot to get health benefits," said lead
author Duck-chul Lee, an assistant professor of kinesiology at Iowa
State University. "I hope this study can motivate more people to start
running and to continue running as an attainable health goal."
It's not clear from the study whether the longer lifespan is directly
caused by running. The researchers were only able to prove a strong link
between running and living longer. There could be other reasons that
runners live longer. It could be that healthy people are the ones who
choose to run, noted the study's authors. The investigators did try to
control the data to account for such factors though.
Current U.S. guidelines for physical activity call for a minimum of 75
minutes per week of running or other vigorous-intensity aerobic
activity, or 30 minutes of moderate-intensity exercise most days of the
week.
But people who exercised less than that still received significant health benefits, according to the new research.
Running modest amounts each week -- less than 51 minutes, fewer than 6
miles, slower than 6 miles per hour, or only one to two times -- was
still associated with solid health benefits compared to no running, the
researchers reported in the Aug. 5 issue of the Journal of the American
College of Cardiology.
The study also suggested that you can have too much of a good thing.
People who regularly ran less than an hour per week reduced their risk
of death just as much as runners who logged three hours or more weekly.
The study involved more than 55,000 adults aged 18 to 100, who were
followed during a 15-year period to determine whether there is a
relationship between running and longevity. About one quarter of this
group were runners.
Participants were asked to complete a questionnaire about their running
habits, and researchers kept track of those who died during the study
period.
The researchers discovered that people who didn't run had a life
expectancy three years less than that of runners. Running was linked to a
30 percent lower risk of death from any cause and a 45 percent lower
risk of death from heart disease or stroke, compared to no running.
Even less-avid runners received significant benefits. Running a minimum
30 minutes to 59 minutes each week -- which equates to just 5 to 10
minutes a day -- was associated with a 28 percent lower overall risk of
death and a 58 percent reduced risk of death from heart disease,
compared with no running.
Source: Iowa State University/WebMD