While any amount of physical
activity is good for you, the benefits of exercise are greater for people who
exceed this recommended level, research shows.
Walking briskly or cycling for the recommended 150
minutes a week can reduce a person's risk of developing type 2 diabetes by up
to 26%, according to new research by UCL and the University of Cambridge.
People who
carry out an hour of moderate to vigorous exercise every day can reduce their
risk of getting type 2 diabetes by 40%. The study also revealed that any amount
of physical activity can reduce the risk of developing the disease.
The research,
published in the journal Diabetologia, is the most
comprehensive study to look at the impact of exercise, independent of other
behavioural factors such as diet, on a person's risk of developing type 2
diabetes.
The UK
Department of Health recommends 150 minutes of moderate to vigorous exercise a
week, which includes brisk walking, gentle cycling or sports such as doubles
tennis. According to the Health Survey for England (2012), as many as a third
of adults are not meeting this target.
The study,
which analysed summarized data from over a million people, demonstrated that
while any amount of physical activity is good for you, the benefits of exercise
are greater for people who exceed this recommended level.
The study
analysed data from 23 studies carried out in the USA, Asia, Australia and
Europe. By combining observations from these studies, the researchers were able
to separate out the effect of leisure time physical activity from other
behavioural factors, and obtain better estimates of the effects of different
physical activity levels.
Previous
studies have often included changes to both diet and physical activity, making
it difficult to isolate the impact of physical activity alone.
"Our
results suggest a major potential for physical activity to slow down or reverse
the global increase in type 2 diabetes and should prove useful for health
impact modelling, which frequently forms part of the evidence base for policy
decisions.," said Andrea Smith (UCL Health Behaviour Research Centre and
Institute of Public Health, University of Cambridge), who led the study.
The prevalence
of type 2 diabetes is growing rapidly due to rising obesity levels and is
estimated to reach nearly 600 million cases worldwide by 2035.
"This
research shows that some physical activity is good, but more is better,"
said Dr Soren Brage, co-author of the study from the Medical Research Council
Epidemiology Unit at Cambridge University.
"We
already know that physical activity has a major role to play in tackling the
growing worldwide epidemic of type 2 diabetes. These new results add more
detail to our understanding of how changes in the levels of physical activity
across populations could impact the incidence of disease. They also lend
support to policies to increase physical activity at all levels. This means
building environments that make physical activity part of everyday life."
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