Older women who engage in light physical activity, even as light as doing household chores, each day may have a lower risk of death, researchers report.
“Doing something is better than nothing, even when at lower-than-guideline recommended levels of physical activity.”
In the study of more than 6,000 white, African-American, and Hispanic women ages 63 to 99 in the United States, researchers found significantly lower risk of death in those who were active at levels only slightly higher than what defines being sedentary.
Women who engaged in 30 minutes per day of light physical activity—as measured by an accelerometer instead of a questionnaire—had a 12 percent lower risk of death.
Women who were able to do a half-hour each day of moderate to vigorous activity had a 39 percent lower mortality risk, according to the study.
For the age group in this study, light physical activities include regular chores such as folding clothes, sweeping the floor, or washing the windows. Activities like these account for more than 55 percent of how older people spend their daily activity. Moderate to vigorous activities would be brisk walking or bicycling at a leisurely pace.
The bottom line? “Doing something is better than nothing, even when at lower-than-guideline recommended levels of physical activity,” says lead author Michael LaMonte, research associate professor of epidemiology and environmental health in the University at Buffalo’s School of Public Health and Health Professions.
Even when researchers simultaneously accounted for the amount of each type of activity (light and moderate-to-vigorous) a woman did, they still observed significantly lower mortality associated with each, independently of the other.
Surprising payoff
“This is remarkable because current public health guidelines require that physical activity be of at least moderate or higher intensity to confer health benefits,” LaMonte says. “Our study shows, for the first time in older women, that health is benefitted even at physical activity levels below the guideline recommendations.”
“The mortality benefit of light intensity activity extended to all subgroups that we examined,” adds principal investigator Andrea LaCroix, professor and chief of epidemiology at the University of California, San Diego.
The mortality benefit was similar for women younger than 80 compared to women over the age of 80. It was similar across racial/ethnic backgrounds, and among obese and non-obese women.
“Perhaps most importantly for this population, the mortality benefit was similar among women with high and low functional ability,” LaCroix says.
While the study focused on older women, researchers say their findings send a powerful message to younger women and men—that it’s important to develop healthy habits around physical activity while you are young so that you are more likely to maintain them when you get older.
Accelerometer tracking
The study incorporated a novel approach. Unlike the majority of previous studies on this issue in which physical activity was measured using questionnaires, researchers measured physical activity using accelerometers.
These motion-sensing devices electronically document and store daily movement patterns and intensity on a 24-hour clock for as many days as the device is worn. Women in this study wore the devices for between four and seven days. Researchers then downloaded the information and analyzed it.
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To make their analysis of physical activity even more specific to older women, the researchers also conducted a laboratory study in a subset of study participants. During this study, they aligned the accelerometer information with completion of activity tasks germane to older women’s usual daily activity habits.
“No other study as large as ours and specifically on older women has included this step to enhance interpretation of accelerometer data in a context relevant to the study participants,” LaMonte says.
Aging America
The findings could have implications for national public health guidelines for physical activity for older US women, especially when considering the projected growth of this particular population over the next several decades.
The US Department of Health and Human Services’ 2018 Physical Activity Guidelines Advisory Committee is considering the researchers’ findings. The government introduced the guidelines in 2008 under then-HHS Secretary Michael O. Leavitt.
By 2050, the population group aged 65 and older will have doubled since 2000, reaching nearly 77 million, according to LaMonte, who adds that women in this age group will outnumber men 2-to-1 at the current expected growth pattern.
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“Our results suggest that the health benefits of lighter activity could reach a large swath of women in an aging society,” LaMonte says.
“These findings are especially relevant to aging well in an aging society,” he adds. “Some people, because of age or illness or deconditioning, are not able to do more strenuous activity. Current guidelines do not specifically encourage light activity because the evidence base to support such a recommendation has been lacking.”
Researchers report their findings in the Journal of the American Geriatrics Society.
Study coauthors include researchers from the University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign; Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center; the University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill; the University of California, San Diego; the University of Alabama; Harvard University; Cornell University; the University of Washington; Brown University; and Stanford University.
Women in this study enrolled in the Objective Physical Activity and Cardiovascular Health Study ancillary to the Women’s Health Initiative.
Source: University at Buffalo