How Many Steps a Day for Better Health? Fewer Than You Think

Staff
By Staff
6 Min Read
If you’re walking to improve your health, you may not have to go as far as you think. A new review study suggests that walking 7,000 steps a day is associated with a significantly lower risk of premature death and conditions like heart disease, diabetes, dementia, and depression — anything beyond that number, and the longevity benefits seem to level off.

That’s a lot less than the ubiquitous target of 10,000 steps a day — a goal many people have a hard time reaching. “Ten thousand steps was always an arbitrary number,” says senior study author Katherine Owen, PhD, of the University of Sydney in Australia. “It originated in Japan as part of a marketing campaign leading into the Tokyo Olympics where they chose 10,000 steps. It was catchy and memorable, and it really stuck.”

How Many Steps a Day, Now?

To see whether people really need 10,000 steps to improve their health, Dr. Owen and colleagues examined data from 57 studies including more than 160,000 adults to assess the connections between daily step counts and a wide variety of health outcomes.

Compared with taking 2,000 steps a day, hitting 7,000 steps was associated with a 47 percent lower risk of premature death from all causes, according to findings published in The Lancet Public Health.

Read the full article here

Share This Article
Leave a comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *