Longevity for Runners

chimera

<font color=deeppink>WISH Racing Team Member<br><f
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Reduced Disability and Mortality Among Aging Runners
A 21-Year Longitudinal Study

Eliza F. Chakravarty, MD, MS; Helen B. Hubert, PhD; Vijaya B. Lingala, PhD; James F. Fries, MD


Arch Intern Med. 2008;168(15):1638-1646.

Background: Exercise has been shown to improve many health outcomes and well-being of people of all ages. Long-term studies in older adults are needed to confirm disability and survival benefits of exercise.

Methods: Annual self-administered questionnaires were sent to 538 members of a nationwide running club and 423 healthy controls from northern California who were 50 years and older beginning in 1984. Data included running and exercise frequency, body mass index, and disability assessed by the Health Assessment Questionnaire Disability Index (HAQ-DI; scored from 0 [no difficulty] to 3 [unable to perform]) through 2005. A total of 284 runners and 156 controls completed the 21-year follow-up. Causes of death through 2003 were ascertained using the National Death Index. Multivariate regression techniques compared groups on disability and mortality.

Results: At baseline, runners were younger, leaner, and less likely to smoke compared with controls. The mean (SD) HAQ-DI score was higher for controls than for runners at all time points and increased with age in both groups, but to a lesser degree in runners (0.17 [0.34]) than in controls (0.36 [0.55]) (P < .001). Multivariate analyses showed that runners had a significantly lower risk of an HAQ-DI score of 0.5 (hazard ratio, 0.62; 95% confidence interval, 0.46-0.84). At 19 years, 15% of runners had died compared with 34% of controls. After adjustment for covariates, runners demonstrated a survival benefit (hazard ratio, 0.61; 95% confidence interval, 0.45-0.82). Disability and survival curves continued to diverge between groups after the 21-year follow-up as participants approached their ninth decade of life.

Conclusion: Vigorous exercise (running) at middle and older ages is associated with reduced disability in later life and a notable survival advantage.
 
Mel

This was excellent but not surprising news when the study was released. Not just longevity, but quality of life as well. I have always said one reason I am out there working hard is so that on my 75th birthday I can take my lovely bride to Paris and we can walk all over the city. The medals and races are fleeting, but feeling healthy and fit is long-lived.

Craig
 
Don't know wher yuo found that, but we all know running's bad for you. Just ask our "friends", co workers and families. ;)

Hope everyone prints this out and hands it to teh nay sayers in our lives! Thanks Mel!
 
This bodes well for my travel plans for the next 50 yrs.
Thanks Mel!
 

How can this be?! Running is so so bad for you! Especially women! Even wtpclc knows!

:confused3

Seriously, I'm glad to see someone thinks we're doing ok. I figure, if I'm trying to be active and eat right, it's better then nothing. While I don't want to live forever, I do want to be around to watch my friend's and family member's kids grow up.
 
I smiled when I first read that article ... I've e-mailed this article to a couple of people I know :)
 
I feel the same thing. I definitely can't talk of what I do with my home friends. They just do not get it. I know--I need to make new friends.

I loved hearing of this the other day in our news report. My doc has said whatever I'm doing I cannot quit. It is keeping me healthy.

Thanks Mel for posting this. It is always good to have validation!
 



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