What are the top ten reasons to walk?

1. Walking prevents type 2 diabetes. The
Diabetes
Prevention Program showed that walking 150 minutes per week and
losing just 7% of your body weight (12-15 pounds) can reduce your
risk of diabetes by 58%.
2. Walking strengthens your heart if you're male.
In one study, mortality rates among retired men
who walked less than one mile per day were nearly twice that among
those who walked more than two miles per day.
3. Walking strengthens your heart if you're
female. Women
in the Nurse's Health Study (72,488 female nurses) who walked three
hours or more per week reduced their risk of a heart
attack or other coronary event by 35% compared with women who
did not walk.
4. Walking is good for your brain. In a study on
walking and cognitive function, researchers found that women who
walked the equivalent of an easy pace at least 1.5 hours per week
had significantly better cognitive function and less cognitive
decline than women who walked less than 40 minutes per week. Think
about that!
5. Walking is good for your bones. Research shows
that postmenopausal women who walk approximately one mile each day
have higher whole-body bone density than women who walk shorter
distances, and walking is also effective in slowing the rate of
bone loss from the legs.
6. Walking helps alleviate symptoms of depression.
Walking for 30 minutes, three to five times per week for 12 weeks
reduced symptoms of depression
as measured with a standard depression questionnaire by 47%.
7. Walking reduces the risk of breast and colon
cancer. Women who performed the equivalent of one hour and
15 minutes to two and a half hours per week of brisk walking had an
18% decreased risk of breast
cancer compared with inactive women. Many studies have shown
that exercise can prevent colon
cancer, and even if an individual person develops colon
cancer,
the benefits
of exercise appear to continue both by increasing quality of
life and reducing mortality.
8. Walking improves fitness. Walking just three
times a week for 30 minutes can significantly increase
cardiorespiratory fitness.
9. Walking in short bouts improves fitness, too! A
study of sedentary women showed that short bouts of brisk walking
(three 10-minute walks per day) resulted in similar improvements in
fitness and were at least as effective in decreasing body fatness
as long bouts (one 30-minute walk per day).
10. Walking improves physical function. Research
shows that walking improves fitness and physical function and
prevents physical disability in older persons.
Credit:
Author: Richard
Weil, MEd, CDE
Medical Editor: William
C. Shiel Jr., MD, FACP, FACR
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