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Counting steps works as well as counting exercise minutes – Harvard Health

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Counting steps works as well as counting exercise minutes – Harvard Health


Trying to meet physical activity goals can be confusing: should you aim for a certain amount of time exercising or a certain number of steps? A Harvard study suggests that both measurement methods are equally effective at tracking whether you’re getting enough activity to reduce disease risk and boost longevity. Researchers analyzed the health information of more than 14,000 healthy women (ages 62 or older) who wore activity trackers for a week and were then followed for nine years. Regardless of the type of exercise they engaged in, women who were the most active had the biggest reductions in risk for cardiovascular disease and early death (30% or more), compared to women who were the least active. And both the minute measurements and step measurements had the same associations with those health benefits. The research was published online May 20, 2024, by JAMA Internal Medicine. Since many people use activity trackers now, the authors say it’s time to add step counts to the federal physical activity recommendations, which currently call for 150 minutes per week of moderate-intensity activity or 75 minutes per week of vigorous-intensity activity. The equivalent in steps would be about 7,000 per day.



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Submit photos, videos of your wellness journey in the new year to ABC7 Chicago

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Submit photos, videos of your wellness journey in the new year to ABC7 Chicago

CHICAGO (WLS) — ABC7 Chicago wants to see your wellness journey in the new year.

RELATED: Our Chicago: Managing your mental well-being during the holidays and into winter

Send us photos and videos, as you tackle exercise, nutrition, mental health, financial wellness and more in 2026.

ABC7 Chicago is now streaming 24/7. Click here to watch

Submit your content below, and you may see yourself on ABC7.

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Jennifer Aniston “doesn’t always want to work out” but her fitness app’s new four-week mindset and movement challenge makes exercise fun not punishing

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Jennifer Aniston “doesn’t always want to work out” but her fitness app’s new four-week mindset and movement challenge makes exercise fun not punishing

Actress Jennifer Aniston has launched a new four-week challenge with fitness app Pvolve to help people get into the right mindset to exercise.

The Worth It Everytime campaign, created in collaboration with mental wellness app Headspace, encourages people to view exercise as something that energizes them rather than punishes them.

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A trainer says returning to exercise in your 40s and 50s should look different to what you did in your 20s—here’s how to get started again

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A trainer says returning to exercise in your 40s and 50s should look different to what you did in your 20s—here’s how to get started again

After a period of inactivity, getting your fitness back can feel like a tough slog.

Jason Smith, a personal trainer, nutritional advisor and founder of Fit in Midlife, knows this from personal experience. He got fit again at 50 after years of inactivity, then started training people of a similar age, helping them to do the same.

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