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Move: the one thing you can do to live better for longer

For this reason, it’s best to incorporate movement into our daily lives. The trick is to make it essential by structuring the way you do things so that physical activity is required for you to get where you need to go or do what you need to do. This means walking or cycling instead of driving to a destination, walking to colleagues’ offices instead of emailing, and using the stairs instead of the lift.

Studies have also shown that when people wear devices that measure their activity, they become more active. We are a competitive species. This can make it hard to research activity, given we change what we are doing when we know we are observed, a phenomenon known as the Hawthorne effect. So tap into whatever helps you to be more active.

What does activity achieve?

Movement stimulates blood flow, which itself brings fuel and oxygen to cells. It also flushes the system, allowing by-products and unwanted accumulations to leave the cells and be metabolised, filtered and excreted. For this reason, every part of your body is improved by activity, which is why research shows us that it prevents many diseases and even prolongs life.

Movement doesn’t just remodel blood vessels (the most essential pipeline of energy and oxygen) it can also stimulate the generation of brand-new blood cells and blood vessels. It does this when you are elderly as well as when you are young.

Even more exciting, science has indicated not only that capabilities can be augmented, but the actual vessels can alter themselves. This remodelling changes their structure, so that the vessels that looked characteristically ‘old’ changed to look characteristically ‘young’ after regular exercise. Exercise literally rejuvenates you.

Do something, however gentle, every day

So, what should we be doing? This is the area that causes most confusion. We often think that to benefit from movement, we must commit to time-consuming, demanding, sometimes expensive activities. The participants in the Healthy Ageing Program have shown us it doesn’t have to be that way.

We expected that we would find people undertaking high-intensity activity would see better health results than those doing lower-intensity activity. Instead, what we found was that doing something small every day was the strongest predictor of health – as opposed to straining, difficult, infrequent sessions of activity.

We were surprised when, in the Women’s Healthy Ageing Project, the duration of exercise emerged as key; looking over several decades, those who did one thing every day had the best outcomes. Although other, shorter-duration studies suggested that high-intensity exercise was important for better outcomes, we noted that those who did intense activity typically did not keep at it daily for several decades.

We found the effect of exercise was cumulative, meaning that every one of the years over those decades mattered. So, while it’s good news that you can make up for lost time, know that if you don’t start early you are losing this contribution to your cumulative score. If you miss today, you have to do twice as much tomorrow – so don’t miss a day.

While researchers explore the answers about what to do, who should do it and when, you should focus on just one thing – the duration. For how long should you be active? The answer to this is: forever. So, choose something you enjoy and can do every day. Change what you do, as you need to. Certain health conditions have optimal activities, like resistance training for sarcopenia, balance training to reduce falls, walking for peripheral vascular disease, and many more – your GP can guide you.

It was a relatively recent cultural evolution that reduced humans’ need to move. We need another one, to restructure our environments in ways that make activity essential.

But for now, ensure that activity is an integral part of your day. Make it effortless by placing it between where you are and where you need to get – make it fit into your everyday activities. Incorporate activity into your community and social time – research shows we do better together.

This is an edited extract of Secrets of Women’s Healthy Ageing by Professor Cassandra Szoeke published by Melbourne University Press on August 31. Szoeke is director of the Healthy Ageing Program at the University of Melbourne and principal investigator of the Women’s Healthy Ageing Project.

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