Fitness
The Power of Brisk Walking in Preventing Type 2 Diabetes
Recent studies have shed light on the significant role brisk walking can play in preventing type 2 diabetes (T2D). An analysis suggests that patients who engage in brisk walking have a 24% lower risk of developing type 2 diabetes compared to those who engage in casual walking. This finding highlights the potential benefits of brisk walking in reducing the risk of T2D and emphasizes the importance of physical activity in disease prevention.
Brisk Walking and Diabetes Risk
A worldwide study found that walking briskly at a speed of 3km/h or faster can lower the risk of developing T2D by 39%. Even strolling at less than 3km/h can confer a 15% lower risk. Remarkably, walking faster than 6km/h has a 39% lower risk of developing the condition. These findings point to a significant correlation between walking speed and the risk of developing type 2 diabetes. It also suggests that brisk walking can lead to better overall health, muscle mass, and cardiorespiratory fitness.
Physical Activity and Disease Prevention
Further research found that walking at a brisk speed of 4 km/hour or above significantly reduced the risk of T2D. Regular walking and exercising can also reduce the risk of illnesses such as heart disease and dementia. For instance, walking half an hour a day and following a low-fat diet can reduce the risk of T2D by 58%.
Physical activity, specifically brisk walking, has been highlighted as a potent tool to affect lifespan and healthspan. Cardiorespiratory fitness, muscle mass, and strength are better predictors of longer life and reducing all causes of mortality. Thus, engaging in brisk walking can be a simple yet powerful strategy to boost overall health and prevent chronic diseases like T2D.
The Benefits of Interval Walking
Interval walking, a form of high-intensity interval training that alternates between moderately paced periods of walking and more intense intervals, also has numerous benefits. These include improving cardiovascular health, increasing calorie expenditure, improving glucose control, preventing the development of type 2 diabetes, improving sleep, and lowering blood pressure. The premise of interval walking is simple, allowing for alternation between rest periods and periods of higher intensity walking. This can be tailored to what feels best for your body on any given day.
In conclusion, brisk walking has been proven to be a viable and easily accessible form of exercise that can significantly reduce the risk of developing type 2 diabetes. By incorporating brisk walking into daily routines, individuals can enjoy improved overall health and a lower risk of T2D. So, why not lace up those walking shoes and get moving for a healthier future?
Fitness
Regular Exercise, Key To Wellness, Long Life – Fitness Expert
A fitness expert and chairman of Gategold Limited, Sir Goodluck Obi, has proffered solutions to rampant cases of sudden deaths of some high profile Nigerians in public places. Obi blamed the incidents on lack of awareness on regular health checks, lack of exercise and lifestyle issues.
Obi told journalists that, ”I became a fitness buff when I took ill some years ago and I went to the USA for treatment.
”The doctor carried out thorough checks and concluded that I should go and do exercise for some time and comeback.
”I complied. After I returned to the doctor, ççhe said I should intensity the exercise for four days and come back to see him. I repeated this routine.
”Finally, he gave me a clean bill of health without administering any treatment. That was what opened my eyes and gave birth to the vision of promoting fitness as a key regimen for long life and wellness. This happened around 2007. That was the beginning of Gategold. It was set up to promote longevity, and healthy life style”.
According to Obi, his business is not just about making money. “Gategold is the vehicle I use to promote my calling for healthy living because I benefited from it myself.”
He revealed that prior to the launch of the Gategold company,he was a successful automobile spare parts dealer.
‘I left a thriving business to promote this vision; a calling indeed that benefits humanity’, he added.
Obi gave insights into human health challenges.’I am not a medical doctor, but by experience, I know that you can be slim and not be healthy. You may look and feel good and not be healthy.
He noted that children exercise themselves by playing, running around, jumping and all that, which helps them grow into healthy adults.
‘For one to stay healthy, you must listen to the voice of your body and react accordingly, before it’s too late’, he added.
We’ve got the edge. Get real-time reports, breaking scoops, and exclusive angles delivered straight to your phone. Don’t settle for stale news. Join LEADERSHIP NEWS on WhatsApp for 24/7 updates →
Join Our WhatsApp Channel
Fitness
Yes, Exercise Can Reverse Brain Aging. How Much Is Less Than You Might Think.
SCIENTISTS HAVE JUST given you one more reason not to skip your workout. Regular exercise could be turning back the age of your brain—by almost a year.
It didn’t take a lot of exercise, either. When people exercised for 150 minutes a week, their brains stayed younger. (If the number sounds familiar, it’s what multiple health organizations, including the CDC recommends for physical activity.) All they did was break their workouts into two 60-minute cardio sessions in the researchers’ lab, followed by a half-hour home workout.
When scientists reviewed the MRI brain scans before and after the year-long trial, they saw that the brains of the regular exercisers were 0.6 years younger than when they first started out. Researchers also looked at the brains of people who didn’t work out at all. Their brains were 0.35 years older. Put together, the difference in brain aging between both groups was nearly a year.
“These absolute changes were modest, but even a one-year shift in brain age could matter over the course of decades,” says Lu Wan, research neuroscience data scientist at the AdventHealth Research Institute and lead study author. Wan and her team unveiled the full results in the Journal of Sport and Health Science.
Considering the 130 people in the study were between 26 and 58, the findings suggest there’s still time to help your brain even if you’ve been sedentary for most of your life.
“Each additional ‘year’ of brain age is associated with meaningful differences in later-life health,” adds Kirk Erickson, PhD, director of translational neuroscience at AdventHealth Research Institute and senior author. “From a lifespan perspective, nudging the brain in a younger direction in midlife could be very important. If we can slow brain aging before major problems appear, we may be able to delay or reduce the risk of later-life cognitive decline and dementia.”
How Does Exercise Help Maintain a Younger Brain?
THE RESEARCHERS LOOKED at several potential pathways exercise might work through—changes in fitness, body composition, blood pressure, or potential changes in a protein called BDNF that helps promote the creation of new brain connections. While exercise improved people’s overall fitness, the team did not find that any of these measures could statistically explain the reversal in brain aging in this trial.
“That was a surprise,” Wan says. “We expected improvements in fitness or blood pressure to account for the effect, but they didn’t. Exercise may be acting through additional mechanisms we haven’t captured yet, such as subtle changes in brain structure, inflammation, vascular health or other molecular factors.”
Still, there’s no need to wait for scientists to figure out the mechanism. Taking action now—whether you’re in your 30s, 40s, and 50s can make a difference later in maintaining a youthful brain.
“People often ask, ‘Is there anything I can do now to protect my brain later?’” DR. Erickson says. “Our findings support the idea that following current exercise guidelines—150 minutes per week of moderate-to-vigorous aerobic activity—may help keep the brain biologically younger, even in midlife.”
Jocelyn Solis-Moreira, MS is the associate health & fitness for Men’s Health and has previously written for CNN, Scientific American, Popular Science, and National Geographic before joining the brand. When she’s not working, she’s doing circus arts or working towards the perfect pull-up.
Fitness
I Ran 5K Every Day for 28 Days – Here’s What it Did to My Body, My Fitness and My Strength
The challenge was simple: run 5k every day for 28 days. No rest days, no shortcuts, no doubling up to get ahead. Just 5k, every day, regardless of how I felt.
I wasn’t starting from scratch, but I wasn’t in peak running shape either. My training had been half-hearted for a while – enough to get by, but not really enough to improve. I knew 5k was doable on any given day. The question was what it would feel like doing it 28 times in a row, with a sleep-shy toddler, work and general life distractions thrown in. I also kept strength training twice a week throughout – mainly because I didn’t want my gym numbers to completely fall off a cliff.
The plan – if you can call it that – was to hold everything steady and see what gave first.
5K a Day
The first week felt like a chore more often than not. A couple of runs came straight after the post-work commute, when motivation was low and the run itself didn’t do much to improve things. One evening in the rain was particularly grim. Another came off the back of no sleep, was left until late and done purely because it had to be.
The gym treadmill made an appearance one lunch break, which was an immediate mistake. Five kilometres indoors felt far longer than it should, even when breaking it up with intervals just to stay engaged.
By the second week, fatigue started to build. Day nine stood out as the hardest – low energy, heavy legs and no real explanation beyond the fact that everything was adding up. It didn’t feel like I was getting fitter, just more tired.
Around the middle of the challenge, things became more manageable. The daily effort started to feel less like a battle and more like routine. By day 20, it was just part of the day.
Daily Habits
Our fitness director, Andrew Tracey, explains the rationale behind daily fitness challenges.
‘If you’re looking to make a habit really stick, to the point where it’s almost automatic, then daily adherence can remove a lot of decision fatigue and deliberation. A study in the European Journal of Social Psychology found that, on average, it takes 66 days to achieve automaticity with a habit, but that daily adherence accelerated this time greatly.
‘That being said, “daily workout challenges” tend to be found at the extremes: Facebook mums committing to 30 squats a day for a month (no shade, a great thing to do), or YouTube men documenting their weird new obsession (“You won’t believe what happened when I did this for 30 days…”). They also tend to veer from harmless, and usually fruitless, to ill-advised and self-destructive. But there’s a lot of evidence in favour of building daily habits – especially fitness ones – and the benefits these can have on the rest of your life.’
Progressive Overload
I wasn’t new to running, but if you are, heed this advice from Daine McKibben Rice, director of Validus Sports Injury Clinic.
‘Running 5k every day for 28 days is less about distance and more about load tolerance. For most people, 5k daily represents a pretty significant increase in cumulative load, particularly if they’re not already running regularly. The strongest evidence shows that rapid increases in training load are the primary driver of running-related injury, rather than distance alone.
‘For beginners, the risks are higher. Around one-third of recreational runners sustain injuries annually, with overuse injuries being the top of the list: such as tendinopathy, shin splints or patellofemoral pain. This can be due to repeated loading without sufficient conditioning or recovery, as musculoskeletal tissues take more time to adapt compared with cardiovascular fitness.
‘A gradual build-up is essential. For beginners, increasing running volume by 5% per week and progressing from two to three runs weekly towards consecutive running days is a safer approach than starting with daily 5k runs.’
The Verdict
By the final day, I wasn’t desperate for it to end, which felt like an achievement in itself. I finished with a 5k time trial and came within 30 seconds of the 20-minute mark – not an all-time PB, but the quickest of the year and better than expected given there hadn’t been a single rest day in four weeks.
The more interesting result was how quickly my body adjusted to running every day. Individual runs didn’t suddenly feel easy, but they stopped feeling like a big deal. It became normal to head out, get 5k done and move on.
The strength training was where things got confusing. I expected my numbers to dip, or at least stall, but the opposite happened. At the end of the challenge, I hit a two-rep squat PB. Which either says something about the benefits of consistent training or suggests I’d been underperforming before. Possibly both.
In body composition, not much changed. I didn’t lose muscle, but I didn’t drop any body fat either. That’s probably down to eating more to keep up with the extra running. Daily cardio on its own isn’t a guaranteed shortcut to getting leaner, especially if you’re fuelling properly. And to be fair, that wasn’t the point of the challenge anyway.
Running every day isn’t something I’d recommend in the long term and it’s not the smartest way to improve performance. But as a short, controlled block of consistency, it does exactly what you’d expect: it builds a habit, raises your baseline and proves you can handle more than you think.
Isaac Williams is Site Editor for both Women’s Health UK and Men’s Health UK, guiding and supporting the content teams to create content across all platforms. Isaac’s love of health and fitness began at Loughborough University, where he graduated with a History and English degree in 2014. His first job was at Men’s Running magazine, where he progressed from Staff Writer to Editor. Among his highlights of those four years include completing a 24-hour track race (never again), just about finishing a multi-day ultramarathon in the Azores, and chugging his way around a ‘beer mile’. Isaac ventured into the world of freelance journalism in 2018, interviewing some of the biggest names in sport – like Anthony Joshua and Ben Stokes – and writing features for the likes of The Guardian, Red Bull, ShortList and BBC Countryfile. He was also a regular contributor to an adventure series called ‘The Man Who’: speaking to some of the world’s most extreme explorers from the wilds of Caffè Nero. In late-2019, Isaac became Editor of Men’s Fitness UK. In his five years there, Isaac was responsible for editing the monthly magazine and managing website content, ultimately helping the brand transition to a ‘digital-first’ approach. He joined Hearst UK as Multiplatform Editor in December 2024, where he manages day-to-day digital output, edits content and writes articles on all things health and fitness. When he’s not hammering at his keyboard, Isaac enjoys exercise and trying – unsuccessfully, so far – to teach his baby son to kick a football. You can follow Isaac on Instagram @isaacw1993.
-
North Dakota10 minutes agoNorth Dakota election results: Latest on US House primary race
-
Ohio13 minutes ago$150,000 funding to be voted on for the Lisbon pool
-
Oklahoma25 minutes agoOklahoma primary election guide for Bartians
-
Oregon28 minutes ago‘Changed my life’: Portland man warns of Facebook Marketplace dangers after robbery leaves him injured
-
South-Carolina33 minutes agoEvette and Wilson advance to runoff for South Carolina governor while Graham clinches nomination
-
Pennsylvania33 minutes agoSmart Glasses in Pennsylvania May Soon Legally Require a Visible Recording Light
-
Rhode Island40 minutes agoWeather Now: Humidity Rises Today; Late Shower Possible
-
South Dakota48 minutes agoWhat to know about the SD’s first gubernatorial runoff