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Rate of exercising may impact risk of flu and pneumonia risk -...

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Rate of exercising may impact risk of flu and pneumonia risk – Study reveals

It’s time to add these justifications for exercising to your list: New research suggests that staying active can reduce the chance of dying from the flu and pneumonia.

The risk of dying from influenza and pneumonia is reduced by 48% when physical activity guidelines for aerobic and muscle-strengthening activity are met, according to a study published on Tuesday in the British Journal of Sports Medicine.

According to the US Department of Health and Human Services’ Physical Activity Guidelines for Americans, adults should engage in at least 150 minutes of moderate aerobic exercise and two or more days of moderate muscle-strengthening exercises per week.

More than 570,000 people’s survey responses from the US National Health Interview Survey from 1998 to 2018 were included in the study. The study divided participants into groups based on how well they met the advised amount of exercise after asking about their physical activity habits.

After the first survey, the participants were followed up with on average for nine years. During that time, 1,516 people died from the flu or pneumonia.

Meeting only the aerobic exercise objective was associated with a 36% decreased risk, but meeting both recommendations for aerobic and muscle-strengthening activity practically cut the risk associated with flu or pneumonia death in half.

The results are significant, according to lead study author Dr. Bryant Webber, an epidemiologist with the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s Division of Nutrition, Physical Activity, and Obesity, as influenza and pneumonia are both among the leading causes of death in the US and around the world.

“Readers may appreciate the importance of influenza and pneumococcal vaccination. This study might encourage them that physical activity may be another powerful tool for protecting themselves against influenza and pneumonia death,” he said.

The results make sense given existing knowledge, and the benefits may extend to other conditions, said Dr. Robert Sallis, director of the sports medicine fellowship at Kaiser Permanente Fontana Medical Center, and clinical professor of family medicine at Kaiser Permanente Bernard J. Tyson School of Medicine in California. He was not involved in the study.

“This study is also consistent with the various studies showing that regular exercise dramatically lowered the risk of COVID-19 related death in similar fashion,” Sallis said in an email.

But even if you can’t reach the recommended amount, some activity can still provide more protection than none, according to the study.

“We also found that any level of aerobic physical activity, even at amounts below the recommended level, lowered the risk of influenza and pneumonia death, as compared to doing no aerobic activity,” Webber said.

Getting 10 to 149 minutes a week of aerobic physical activity was associated with a 21% decreased risk of flu and pneumonia death, the study showed.

“Our overarching advice for everyone — regardless of age or perceived physical fitness level — is to ‘move more and sit less,’” Webber said in an email. “Readers who do not get any physical activity should be encouraged that doing any is better than none.”

That being said, no additional benefit was seen for people who got more than 600 minutes a week of aerobic activity, the study showed.

And in the case of muscle strengthening, there is such a thing as too much, the study showed.

Meeting the target of two or more sessions lowered the mortality risk significantly, but getting seven or more sessions was associated with a 41% increased risk of death by flu or pneumonia, the study showed.

However, this was an observational study, the researchers noted, which means that the study can’t make claims about what causes or prevents the deaths — just what factors were associated with a level of risk.

The increased risk could be related to a range of factors, including the cardiovascular impacts of frequent muscle-strengthening activity or inaccurate responses to the survey, the study said.

Even though there are limitations in the design, researchers often rely on these studies when it is impossible to randomize people into different lifestyles, Sallis said.

Aerobic activity — or cardio, as it’s often called — doesn’t have to mean getting yourself to the gym regularly, the study said. This type of movement is anything that gets your heart rate and sweat glands going, including speed walking, swimming, biking, running or stair climbing.

Exercises such as lifting weights, squats, lunges or even heavy gardening can count as your muscle-strengthening activity, the study added.

A megastudy published in December 2021 showed that the best exercise programs include planning when you work out, getting reminders, offering incentives and discouraging missing more than one planned workout in a row.

“If people are hoping to boost their physical activity or change their health behaviors, there are very low-cost behavioral insights that can be built into programs to help them achieve greater success,” said that study’s lead author Katy Milkman, the James G. Dinan Professor at the Wharton School of the University of Pennsylvania and author of “How to Change: The Science of Getting From Where You Are to Where You Want to Be.”

You can start small, said Dana Santas, a CNN fitness contributor and mind-body coach for professional athletes, in a 2022 CNN article.

“Fitting in ten minutes of exercise every day is so much easier than people think. Consider how fast ten minutes goes by when you’re mindlessly scrolling social media or watching your favorite TV show,” Santas said in an email. “It’s not a big time investment, but it can deliver big health benefits.”

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