Posted on 08/03/2014 12:24:55 PM PDT by nickcarraway
According to a new study published in the Journal of the American College of Cardiology, running 5 minutes per day can reduce an individuals risk of premature death by about 3 years. Researchers found that people who ran less than an hour per week also saw an increase in lifespan, not just a decrease in risk of premature death. The study took place over the course of 15 years, testing participants ranging in age from 18-100.
(Excerpt) Read more at time.com ...
"We moved our base camp last night and were now positioned literally
within feet of the river. Have been sitting here watching the border
patrol patrolling in their riverboats all night and all morning..."~Jim Robinson
Agree. They did a study and found the average over 35 yrs female who is obese gets less than five cardiovascular exercise IN A YEAR...! :O
Don’t know about men.
“5 min a day”. Well looky there, I’m right again.
Agree. I do about 12-15 miles per week, which seems to keep me in good shape and my weight in check.
I run a mile and a half about 4 times a week. That’s the right distance for me.
I prefer the sit down exercise. I sit down, and then eventually I get up again.
I do 20 “Fundamental Mobility Exercises” (FME) in 10 minutes. Each targeted FME is timed at 30 seconds: 20 FME x 30sec/ea = 10 minutes
Since designing and performing this basic set of Fundamental Mobility Exercises each day, my fitness has increased to the point that I can participate in very high level physical activities that involve running, sprinting jumping throwing catching climbing, etc.
But takes years off of my knees. I’ll stick with my kettlebells thank you.
Get me a beer while you're up.
/johnny
If factors A and B are correlated on non-randomized sample, that only implies that And B belong to the common web of causes of effects, not that A causes B (since there can be a factor C that causes A and B). E.g. it could be that those who run more are precisely those who are have better health or whose biological age is genetically lower than their chronological age etc.
Another common feature of such junk science is that they always blame the victim for whatever problem they focusing on. And as with smokers and those of higher weight than what is officially declared to be "normal", that means they are setting up a pretext to tax you extra for your "sin".
It's the same old scam that medieval churches ran for centuries with selling of indulgences, except that language was modernized for the church of scientism (i.e. pseudo-science).
Roflmao!!
Those that can run are lucky. There are people who do good to walk to the mail box and back from either breathing issues or spinal ones.
I fall in the later category. My entire spine has degeneration, bulges, 3 annular tears, bone spurs, herniated lumbar disc, compression fracture of the L4/5 impinging on the S1. Complicate that with OP DX of -3.1 and being allergic to the drugs. Every trip to Physio causes more damage. I am deemed a none surgical fix.
Every step I take is painful, and have to fight daily to stay out of a wheel chair. And take every bone vitamin and mineral that your bones are composed of instead of the FDA waring OP drugs. Already had 1 bad reaction to Fosamax. Fear the others because of the FDA warnings.
I keep my weight in check with a type 2 diabetic diet, it keeps the weight down, as well as the cholesterol as I eliminated the high sugar fruits.
Today I was at an 87th Birthday party.
She never talked to me about running...
“Study: Running 5 Minutes a Day Could Add Years to Your Life”
WOW! So THAT’s how Muslim’s live to twenty-two!
“years” is a very inexact measure. Five minutes a day is about 5 days over the course of a year. So running 5 minutes a day for about 90 years is about a year of running. It sounds to me as if it is about a wash considering the amount of time one runs over 90 years would be about one year of increased life expectancy. It hardly seems worth the effort.
thats:
1hr X 365days in a year X 50 years = 18250 hours
hm... 18250 hours... well that's:
18250 total hours worked out over a lifetime /24 hours in a day = 760 days
and 760 days / 365 days in a year = 2.083 YEARS spent working out!
so.... unless you are adding more than 2.083 years (the time you lost working out that you could have been doing other things) then you are actually losing ground.
Always keep the time lost in mind when it comes to working out and the gains you supposedly get from it.
I run three times a week, but those type of studies give me a creepy feeling. Doesn’t Winston,in 1984, wake up to the sound of the tv telling him to get up and exercise.
also keep in mind that the time gained includes time asleep, while the time lost working out is lost from your waking hours.
and .... the time added is added to the end of your life, while a good chunk of the time lost is taken from your youth.
is it really a good trade to get an extra year or two at the end of your life in trade for time lost during your prime?
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