Exact number of steps to each day to 'add 3 years to your life - it's not 10K

920     0
You don
You don't have to worry about doing 10,000 steps according to a new study (stock photo) (Image: Getty Images/Science Photo Library RF)

For those who struggle to walk 10,000 steps a day, listen up.

We all know how important it is to get our steps in each day for our health - it's been revealed how many we should be doing daily. For years, we've been told that 10,000 steps is the magical number, although it's now been found far fewer steps still have the same effect.

In a study by Vitality Insurance and the London School of Economics, they found that walking 5,000 steps just three days a week can have all sorts of health benefits - and that it can increase life expectancy by three years.

In the study, they analysed walking habits and health of just over one million people in the UK and South Africa for a decade and they found that 35 per cent of people in the UK are "inactive", and due to this, is leading to a huge increase in diseases such as type 2 diabetes and in result fuelling hospitalisations.

The researchers concluded that if just half of those did even 5,000 steps once a week, the savings on the NHS for hospitalisations would be a staggering £4 billion. It was also found that people 65 and over who walked more than 7,500 steps three times a week were around 52 per cent less likely to have a premature death. Those aged between 45-65 had a 38 per cent reduction and there was a 27 per cent reduction for the rest of the population in the UK.

Woman tells of losing 29 kilos and becoming a bodybuilder in her 60s qhidqkidrqiqzdinvWoman tells of losing 29 kilos and becoming a bodybuilder in her 60s

"Taking consistent steps to achieve a healthy habit is key, and we can see from this data that it’s never too late to start," Neville Koopowitz, Vitality CEO, told The Sun. So walking 5,000 steps three times a week for just two years can increase life expectancy by 2.5 years for men and three years for women - but the more you do the better.

10,000 steps three times a week can help to reduce type 2 diabetes risks by 41 per cent, and if you did this four times a week, it reduces the risk even more to 57 per cent.

Professor Joan Costa-Font, London School of Economics, said: "The findings of this study are a clear call to action for policymakers to promote prevention in public health and build on the power of healthy habits to improve individual and collective health outcomes.

"Successful habit-based interventions can lengthen life expectancy, entail considerable savings for public health services, improve productivity, and help address the significant long-term challenges posed by mental health, social isolation, and non-communicable diseases such as cancer and type 2 diabetes."

It's recommended by NHS that people should be doing some sort of exercise every day, and strength training at least twice a week.

Niamh Kirk

Expert Advice, Fitness

Read more similar news:

01.02.2023, 09:00 • Sport
Chelsea winners and losers from record transfer window as more changes to come
01.02.2023, 14:05 • Sport
Michael Chandler keen to take on Conor McGregor as coach in The Ultimate Fighter
01.02.2023, 20:43 • News
X Factor's Honey G spills on strict fitness regime after two stone weight loss
02.02.2023, 08:52 • Crime
They look and taste like sweets - no wonder underage vaping is sweeping Britain
02.02.2023, 09:40 • News
Surprising symptom that 40% of women suffer weeks before a heart attack
02.02.2023, 11:40 • Sport
Jockey Aidan Macdonald who returned to ride after stroke announces retirement
02.02.2023, 16:07 • Crime
Heroic bystanders chase off attacker who dragged teen through alley to rape her
03.02.2023, 17:33 • Sport
Liverpool add three players to Champions League squad as summer signings removed
03.02.2023, 22:51 • News
Man, 26, diagnosed with incurable cancer after struggling to wee while drunk
04.02.2023, 15:47 • More
Stacey Solomon's BBC show accused of 'animal cruelty' over tiny rabbit hutch