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			 To help people live longer, national guidelines for physical fitness 
			recommend that adults get at least 150 minutes of moderate-intensity 
			aerobic activity or 75 minutes of vigorous exercise each week. But 
			much of the evidence behind these recommendations has looked at 
			exercise at only one point in time, leaving a murky picture of how 
			lifelong exercise habits might impact longevity, researchers note in 
			JAMA Network Open. 
 For the current study, researchers examined data on 315,059 adults 
			ages 50 to 71 who completed surveys about their exercise habits from 
			adolescence through the most recent decade. During an average 
			follow-up of almost 14 years, 71,377 people had died, including 
			22,219 from heart disease and 16,388 from cancer.
 
			
			 
			
 Compared to people who were inactive throughout their lives, 
			participants who reported consistently high levels of exercise from 
			youth through middle age were 36 percent less likely to die of any 
			cause during the study period.
 
 But the benefit was similar when inactive people got moving only 
			when they were between 40 and 61. When previously sedentary people 
			started exercising in middle age, they were 35 percent less likely 
			to die of all causes during the study than if they remained 
			inactive.
 
 "We were very pleased to see that individuals who increased their 
			exercise participation only later in adulthood still enjoyed the 
			health benefits associated with exercise participation," said study 
			leader Pedro Saint-Maurice of the National Cancer Institute in 
			Bethesda, Maryland.
 
 "These findings suggest that if you're active in early adulthood, 
			stay active - don't decrease," Saint-Maurice said by email. "If 
			you're in your 40-60s and you have not been active for a long time, 
			it's not too late to start exercising now."
 
 Overall, about 56 percent of participants consistently exercised 
			throughout their lives. Another 31 percent started strong but 
			tapered off over time; and 13 percent were inactive early in life 
			but got moving later on.
 
			
			 
			
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			Compared to people who were always inactive, participants who 
			consistently exercised were 42 percent less likely to die of heart 
			disease and 14 percent less likely to die of cancer, the study 
			found. 
			When people started out inactive but got moving later on, they were 
			43 percent less likely to die of heart disease and 16 percent less 
			likely to die of cancer than if they remained sedentary.
 The study doesn't prove whether or how exercise might help people 
			live longer, and the researchers say it's possible that healthier 
			people were more likely to exercise. The study also didn't examine 
			what types of workout, or what intensity or frequency of exercise, 
			might be ideal.
 
 "The take-home message is that physical activity is important for a 
			healthy and long life," said Dr. Per Ladenvall of the Institute of 
			Medicine, Sahlgrenska Academy at Gothenburg University in Sweden.
 
			While current guidelines call for at least 150 minutes of moderate 
			workouts or 75 minutes of intense exercise per week, they also 
			suggest that more is better, Ladenvall, who wasn't involved in the 
			study, said by email. 
			
			 
			"The same guidelines acknowledge that additional health benefits can 
			be achieved in aerobic physical activity up to 300 minutes a week of 
			moderate intensity, or 150 minutes a week of vigorous intensity 
			aerobic physical activity," Ladenvall said.
 But people shouldn't do too much too soon, Ladenvall advised.
 
 "It is also recommended for sedentary people to increase their 
			physical activity gradually."
 
 SOURCE: https://bit.ly/2XMHLkB JAMA Network Open, online March 8, 
			2019.
 
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