Try
eliminating these five bad health habits: smoking, not exercising,
being overweight, drinking too much alcohol and eating an unhealthy
diet.
That's the takeaway from a new
study that analyzed the impact of those behaviors on the chance of
living a longer life free of diabetes, cardiovascular disease, cancer
and other chronic diseases.
"We
found that following a healthy lifestyle can substantially extend the
years a person lives disease-free," said senior author Dr. Frank Hu, who
chairs the department of nutrition at Harvard T.H. Chan School of
Public Health.
"In
particular, women who practiced all five habits gained over 10 years of
disease-free life, and men who did so gained almost eight years," Hu
said.
Additional data
The research is an extension of a study published last year that followed more than 38,000 men for 28 years and 73,000 women for 34 years.
That
research found women who adopted all five healthy habits at age 50
lived 14 years longer than women who did not; men who were following all
five lifestyle factors at age 50 lived 12 years longer than men who
followed none.
This new study,
published Wednesday in the journal BMJ, examined the same data to see
how chronic disease affected the quality of life during the study
period.
The research was designed to see how
five healthy behaviors interacted to affect disease risk: never smoking,
keeping a healthy BMI below 25, doing at least 30 minutes of physical
activity each day, drinking alcohol moderately and eating a good quality
diet.
Women who practiced four or
five of the healthy habits over the next 20 to 30 years, Hu said, had an
additional 10.6 years of disease-free living compared to women who
adopted no lifestyle changes. When broken down by disease, the healthier
women gained an average of eight years free of cancer, 10 years with no
cardiovascular disease and 12 years without diabetes.
Men
who practiced four to five healthy behaviors gained 7.6 years' longer
life expectancy; an average of six more years without cancer, almost
nine more years free of heart issues and over 10 years without diabetes.
The
results held true even after adjusting the data for age, ethnicity,
family medical history and other potentially influential factors,
Not
surprisingly, men who were heavy smokers -- defined as 15 or more
cigarettes a day -- or obese men and women with a BMI of 30 or more had
fewer years without disease.
What
happened if a person was diagnosed with a disease during the study? The
data showed half of people diagnosed with cancer lived an additional 23
years if they adopted four of five healthy practices. Among those who
didn't change, half only survived an additional 11 years. The same
patterns were seen for both heart disease and diabetes.
"This is a positive health message
because it means healthy lifestyle habits not only prolong life, but
also improve the quality of life and reduce sufferings related to
chronic diseases," Hu said.
The
study had some limitations, including that the data on adherence to the
five lifestyle factors were all self-reported, making an outcome
vulnerable to measurement errors.
What if you've not eliminated these five bad habits from your life?
"it
is never too late to adopt these habits," Hu said. "For smokers, the
single most important thing that one should do is to stop smoking. For
nonsmokers, eating a healthy diet and being physically active are
important for keeping a healthy weight."
Full Article & Source:
Avoid these five risk factors and live longer, study says
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