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Review
. 2024 Jan;13(1):24-29.
doi: 10.1016/j.jshs.2023.09.006. Epub 2023 Sep 20.

Dose-response associations, physical activity intensity and mortality risk: A narrative review

Affiliations
Review

Dose-response associations, physical activity intensity and mortality risk: A narrative review

Ulf Ekelund et al. J Sport Health Sci. 2024 Jan.

Abstract

Physical activity is consistently associated with reduced mortality, decreased risk for non-communicable diseases, and improved mental health in observational studies. Randomized controlled trials and observational Mendelian randomization studies support causal links between physical activity and health outcomes. However, the scarcity of evidence from randomized controlled trials, along with their inherent challenges like exposure contrasts, healthy volunteer biases, loss to follow-up, and limited real-world dose-response data, warrants a comprehensive approach. This review advocates synthesizing insights from diverse study designs to better understand the causal relationship between physical activity, mortality risk, and other health outcomes. Additionally, it summarizes recent research since the publication of current physical activity recommendations. Novel observational studies utilizing device-measured physical activity underscore the importance of every minute of activity and suggest that all intensity levels confer health benefits, with vigorous-intensity potentially requiring lower volumes for substantial benefits. Future guidelines, informed by device-measured physical activity studies, may offer refined age-specific recommendations, emphasize vigorous-intensity physical activity, and include daily step counts as a simple, easily assessable metric using commercial wearables.

Keywords: Accelerometers; Non-communicable diseases; Public health; Sedentary behavior.

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Conflict of interest statement

Competing interests The authors declare that they have no competing interests.

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