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Using pedometers while walking may be beneficial to your health: Study

Brisk walking for 30 minutes or more daily on most days of the week can help adults and older adults achieve important health benefits, researchers said.

Using pedometers while walking may be beneficial to your health: Study (Representational image)

New Delhi: If you use a pedometer to track your footsteps on a daily basis, then you are certainly a point above those people who don't when it comes to health.

According to a study, using pedometers to count steps as a part of a 12-week walking programme, can account for a healthier, more active lifestyle later.

Tracking your number of steps on a daily basis certainly has health benefits and it is also a motivating factor where physical activity is concerned.

Brisk walking for 30 minutes or more daily on most days of the week can help adults and older adults achieve important health benefits, researchers said.

"We knew that pedometers could improve physical activity levels in the population in the short-term, but long-term health benefits require sustained increases in physical activity levels," said co-author of the study, Tess Harris, Professor of Primary Care Research at St George's, University of London.

For the study, published in the journal PLOS Medicine, researchers compared adults and older adults in two 12-week walking programmes who were using pedometers, with people who did not receive the pedometers and advice.

The result showed that the pedometer groups were still doing more physical activity three to four years later.

The researcher led two trials called Pedometer Accelerometer Consultation Evaluation (PACE)-UP and PACE-Lift which had similar components – pedometers, 12-week walking programmes based on behaviour change techniques and physical activity diaries.

The material, advice, and pedometers were provided either by post or as part of practice nurse physical activity consultations.

The PACE-UP trial recruited 1,023 inactive 45 to 75-year-old primary care patients.

It found after a three-year follow-up, that those in both the postal and the nurse advice groups were still doing approximately an extra 600 steps per day and 24-28 extra minutes of moderate-to-vigorous physical activity weekly, in 10-minute bouts, than those in the comparison group who had received usual care.

The PACE-Lift trial recruited 298 primary care patients aged 60 to 75 years.

It found that at four-year follow-up, those in the nurse intervention group were doing approximately an extra 400 steps per day and an extra 33 minutes per week of moderate-to-vigorous physical activity in 10-minute bouts, compared to the group who had received usual care.

(With IANS inputs)

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