Healthy Habits Can Mean 14 Extra Years — StudyHealthy Habits Can Mean 14 Extra Years — Study
From SULE AMUDA, Abuja with Agency Reports
To get an extra 14 years of life, don't smoke, eat lot of fruits and
vegetables, exercise regularly and drink alcohol in moderation. That is
the findings of a new study conducted on about 20,000 people in the
United Kingdom.
Kay-Tee Khaw of the University of Cambridge and colleagues calculated
that people who adopted these four healthy habits lived an average of
14 years longer than those who didn't.
“We've know for a long time that these behaviours are good things to
do, but we've never seen these additive benefits before,” said Susan
Jebb, head of Nutrition and Health at Britain's Medical Research
Council, which helped pay for the study.
“Just doing one of these behaviours helps, but every step you make to
improve your health seems to have an added benefit,” said Jebb, who was
not involved in the study.
The benefits were also seen regardless of whether or not people were
fat and what social class they came from. The findings were published
online Monday in the Public Library of Science Medicine journal.
The study included healthy adults aged 45 to 79. Participants filled in
a health questionnaire between 1993 and 1997 and nurses conducted a
medical exam at a clinic.
Participants scored a point each for not smoking, regular physical
activity, eating five servings of fruits and vegetables a day and
moderate alcohol intake.
Until 2006, the researchers tracked deaths from all causes, including
cardiovascular disease, cancer and respiratory diseases. People who
scored four points were four points were four times less likely to die
than those who scored zero, the research showed.
Khaw said that the study should convince people that improving their
health does not always require extreme changes to their lifestyles.
“We didn't ask these people to do anything exceptional, “Khaw said. “We
measured normal behaviours that were entirely feasible within people's
normal, everyday lives.” Public health experts said they hoped the
study would inspire governments to help people adopt these changes.
“This research is an important piece of work which emphasizes how
modifying just a few risk factors can add years to your life, Said Dr.
Tim Armstrong, a physical activity expert at the World Health
Organisation.
But because the study only observed people rather than testing specific
changes, experts said that it would be impossible to conclude that
people who suddenly adopted these healthy behaviour would automatically
gain 14 years.
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