Yeah, that title caught my attention too when I saw it pop up over at Sporteluxe. Really could something so simple add hours to your life? If so, sign me up! Like literally doing some for a duration of time can add that amount of time by 7 to your life. That seems like a pretty worthy thing to commit yourself to now.
Because it was so beautifully written, I am going to share the actual article with all the details below from Sporteluxe. The research doesn’t lie – check it out.
Dear science:ย we get it. You really want us to start running.
Last month, a study published in the Journal of Physiology proved that running (compared to weight training or HIIT training) encouraged the creation and growth of new brain cells. Essentially, running causes the brain to grow and develop.
And this week, a new study from the Cooper Institute in Dallas revealed that one hour of running can add up to 7 hours to your life. Talk about a return on your investment, right?
The most recent findings were actually a follow-up to a study that was published three years ago, in which researchers found that just five minutes of running a day could increase a personโs lifespan. Surprised by their findings, the team behind the paper decided to dig more deeply into the specifics of just how much running correlates to lifespan. They also set out to determine if other types of exerciseโlike walking or hiking or cyclingโwere as beneficial as running to increasing longevity.
Hereโs what they determined:
Regular running drops your risk of premature death by 40 percent.
According to the study, it doesnโt matter what pace you run or how far you goโas long as you run regularly, your risk of dying younger drops dramatically.
Even if you have unhealthy habits, running can still increase your lifespan.
In fact, even participants with unhealthy habits that contribute to premature death like smoking, drinking, or obesity dropped their risk of early death by 40 percent.
Running for two hours a week adds 3.2 years to your life.
On average, participants ran about two hours a week. Over the course of forty years, total time spent running is about six monthsโwhich means youโll still add net 2.6 years to your life if you take up the sport. Pretty good, right?
But running wonโt help you live foreverโjust about 3 years more.
Sadly, the benefits of running cap out at three years. Although researchers found that improvements in life expectancy plateauedย around four hours a week, they didnโt find any negative effects in participants that ran more than four hours. So you can train for that marathon knowing that it will add three years to your lifeโbut it wonโt make you immortal.
Unfortunately, researchers didnโt see the same longevity benefits to other forms of exercise, even if they were just as physically demanding as running. Scientists are unsure whyย running seems to be more efficacious than other types of aerobic exercise, but it could have something to do with the fact that it prevents against other factors of early death, like high blood pressure andย belly fat.
Regardless, it seems that we need to start lacing up our running shoes more often!