Early bird
tickets
available now!
Savills
Savills
Savills
Leisure Opportunities
Job search
Job Search
see all jobs
Latest job opportunities
star job
Pendle Leisure Trust
£Competitive + fabulous benefits package
Nelson, Lancashire
Everyone Active
Competitive rates of pay
South Oxhey Leisure Centre, Watford
star job
New Hall School
£3,768pa (9.00am-2.00pm, Saturdays, in term time)
Chelmsford, Essex
Heritage Great Britain
c£70,000 + benefits + relocation support
Snowdonia, North Wales
City of London Corporation
£35,663 - £39,805pa + Local Govt Pension + benefits
Epping Forest, London

Not exercising 'worse for health than smoking, diabetes and heart disease'

Job opportunities
Heritage Great Britain
c£70,000 + benefits + relocation support
location: Snowdonia, North Wales, United Kingdom
New Hall School
£3,768pa (9.00am-2.00pm, Saturdays, in term time)
location: Chelmsford, Essex, United Kingdom
Pendle Leisure Trust
£Competitive + fabulous benefits package
location: Nelson, Lancashire, United Kingdom
more jobs

A hard-hitting new study claims that living a sedentary lifestyle is more detrimental to health than smoking, diabetes and heart disease.

The findings are based on a retrospective study of 122,007 patients over the course of 23 years, (between 1991 and 2014), which looked at the association between cardiorespiratory fitness and long-term mortality.

During the period, the patients had undergone testing at Ohio's Cleveland Clinic – including exercise treadmill testing (ETT) – giving an overall picture of their cardiovascular fitness.

Of those taking part, 13,637 died during the 23-year period.

The study found that there was an increase in all-cause mortality associated with reduced cardiorespiratory fitness comparable to – or greater than – traditional clinical risk factors such as coronary artery disease and diabetes.

In subgroup analysis, extreme cardiorespiratory fitness – seen in elite athletes – was associated with the lowest risk-adjusted all-cause mortality compared with all other performance groups.

In its conclusion, the study found that cardiorespiratory fitness is inversely associated with long-term mortality with "no observed upper limit of benefit".

Extremely high aerobic fitness was associated with the greatest survival and was associated with benefit in older patients and those with hypertension.

"Cardiorespiratory fitness is a modifiable indicator of long-term mortality, and health care professionals should encourage patients to achieve and maintain high levels of fitness," the study reads.

Dr. Wael Jaber, a cardiologist and a senior author of the study, added that the results were "extremely surprising."

"Being unfit on a treadmill or in an exercise stress test has a worse prognosis, as far as death, than being hypertensive, being diabetic or being a current smoker," Jaber said.

"We've never seen something as pronounced as this and as objective as this."

The results of the study – by Cleveland Clinic Foundation – were published on 19 October in the journal JAMA Network Open.

Sign up for FREE ezines & magazines
A hard-hitting new study claims that living a sedentary lifestyle is more detrimental to health than smoking, diabetes and heart disease.
SAR,HAF,FIT,IND,PTS,RES,SSC
THUMB29603_108062.jpg

More News

1 - 15 of 68,012
05 Jul 2024
Industry body CIMSPA, which represents workers across the physical activity sector, has created an online platform to support training and career development. The Training Academy ... More
05 Jul 2024
Nutrient vitamin IV therapy franchise, Prime IV Hydration & Wellness, is accelerating its expansion across the US, having recently launched its third location in Nashville's ... More
04 Jul 2024
Edinburgh Leisure is launching a six-week introduction to Nordic walking as part of its award-winning Ageing Well Project. Offered via external funding and donations, Ageing ... More
04 Jul 2024
Third Space is celebrating the launch of its 11th club in London at the historic Battersea Power Station development. The new club is located at ... More
04 Jul 2024
Sound wellness company Swell has launched AI-generated music solutions for spas and hotels, scientifically proven to improve wellbeing. Founded by international DJ Brian d’Souza, Swell's ... More
03 Jul 2024
Happy staff make more profitable businesses is the message of Jetts CEO, Elaine Jobson’s new book High Performance through Happy People. Jobson will be travelling ... More
Life Fitness (UK) Ltd
Life Fitness (UK) Ltd
03 Jul 2024
Grand Hotel Son Net – a stylish, art-filled Mallorcan boutique hotel – has launched a brand-new spa and wellness area, after reopening in 2023. Reserved ... More
02 Jul 2024
The European College of Sports Science (ECSS) welcomes 3,000 academics to the University of the West of Scotland in Glasgow from today (2 July) to ... More
01 Jul 2024
According to research carried out in the US by YouGov, cost is the main reason for cancelling gym memberships, followed by a change of circumstances ... More
01 Jul 2024
Village Hotels has changed hands following a deal between the owner – an affiliate of KSL Capital Partners – and funds managed by Blackstone Real ... More
02 Jul 2024
The Global Wellness Institute (GWI) has released a new report emphasising the critical role of mental wellness in supporting overall mental health. Authored by GWI ... More
28 Jun 2024
In 2026, the traditional bathhouse experience will get a futuristic twist with the arrival of Submersive – an innovative concept combining classical spa therapies with ... More
28 Jun 2024
Lifestyle hospitality company Sbe is branching into longevity and wellness with a new brand of properties, the first of which will open in LA’s Century ... More
27 Jun 2024
F45 Training has become the first health and fitness operator to make its functional/HIIT group workouts available on Strava, the digital community with 125 million ... More
26 Jun 2024
PureGym has partnered with the British Heart Foundation to upload all of its defibrillators to The Circuit, which allows the ambulance service to access them ... More
1 - 15 of 68,012
Savills
Savills