If you have trouble fitting exercise into your schedule, there may be good news: Compared with inactive people, active people have a decreased risk of death from cancer and cardiovascular disease even if they exercise just once or twice a week, according to a paper published in the March 2017 issue of JAMA Internal Medicine.
Compared to those in the inactive group, the members of the regularly active group were, on average, 35 percent less likely to die of any cause and 21 percent less likely to die of cancer during the study’s follow-up period, which ranged from four to 22 years. “Insufficiently active” people were an average of 31 percent less likely to die of any cause and 14 percent less likely to die of cancer than inactive people. Weekend warriors, on average, were 30 percent less likely to die of any cause than inactive people. While weekend warriors had a lower cancer death rate than inactive people, the difference between the groups was not statistically significant.
Lead author Gary O’Donovan, a physical activity researcher at Loughborough University in England, encourages all adults to get active in whatever way they can. “I would hope people would remain physically active for the rest of their lives to take advantage of these benefits,” he says.