Patients with heart disease who did moderate to vigorous physical
activity for 30 minutes at least five times a week saved an average
of more than $2,500 (about 2222 euros) in annual healthcare costs,
the study found.
And even gym rats without heart disease may experience lower costs,
according to the study in the Journal of the American Heart
Association.
“The financial benefits with regular exercise were notable across
the entire spectrum of risk including those with and without known
cardiovascular disease,” study author Dr. Khurram Nasir, director of
the Center for Healthcare Advancement and Outcomes at Baptist Health
South Florida, said by email.
For cardiovascular health, the American Heart Association recommends
at least 30 minutes of moderate-intensity aerobic activity five days
a week, or at least 25 minutes of vigorous aerobic activity three
days a week, or a combination of the two.
Moderate activity — which causes a light sweat, or only modest
increases in breathing or heart rate — includes fast walking, lawn
mowing or heavy cleaning. Vigorous activity includes running or race
walking, lap swimming or aerobics.
Even though getting 150 minutes of moderate to vigorous exercise
each week is associated with fewer complications and deaths from
heart disease, roughly two-thirds of heart disease patients still
fail to get this much physical activity, Nasir and colleagues note.
To assess the financial impact of exercise on these patients,
researchers examined data from a 2012 nationwide survey of more than
26,000 U.S. adults, excluding people who were underweight, pregnant
or unable to walk up to 10 steps.
Overall, 1,896 of the participants, or 9 percent, had a
cardiovascular disease diagnosis, representing 19.4 million adults
nationwide.
Among the people without heart disease, 49 percent reported getting
at least the minimum recommended amount of exercise each week,
compared with just 32 percent of those with cardiovascular disease.
People in the study with cardiovascular disease - including coronary
artery disease, stroke, heart attack, irregular heartbeats or
peripheral artery disease - had higher healthcare costs.
But the subset of heart-cardiovascular disease patients who
regularly exercised had average healthcare costs more than $2,500
lower than those who didn’t meet exercise guidelines.
This is probably due to averted hospitalizations and emergency
department visits, which can be quite costly, Nasir said.
Participants were also grouped according to their number of
cardiovascular risk factors - high blood pressure, high cholesterol,
diabetes, smoking and obesity.
[to top of second column] |
Among the healthiest participants, with no heart disease and not
more than one cardiovascular risk factor, those that exercised
regularly had yearly medical costs averaging about $500 lower (about
444 euros) than those who didn’t exercise.
The research suggests that if just 20 percent of patients with
cardiovascular disease who are not getting enough physical activity
would meet exercise goals, it might save up to $6 billion (about 5.3
billion euros) a year in health care costs, Nasir said.
Limitations of the study include its reliance on self-reported
physical activity data, which the authors note may not be accurate.
People in the study with high blood pressure weren't classified as
cardiovascular disease patients, which may have led to an
underestimate of the number of people with the disease and the
potential financial benefits of exercise, the authors acknowledge.
Even so, the findings add to a large body of evidence already
suggesting that regular exercise is associated with lower health
costs, said Dr. Jorge Plutzky, director of preventive cardiology at
Brigham and Women's Hospital and Harvard Medical School in Boston.
“The study might reinforce the notion that it is never too late to
start and that patients who have had cardiovascular issues should
not have an attitude that it is already too late,” Plutzky, who
wasn’t involved in the study, said by email. “Of course any physical
activity program should be done in conjunction with a physician’s
guidance.”
SOURCE: http://bit.ly/2cs5EaW Journal of the American Heart
Association, online September 7, 2016.
[© 2016 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.] Copyright 2016 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed. |