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by starchild_3001
1200 days ago
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Measuring associations is one thing. Intervening in people's lives to reduce disease and mortality with exercise is another. Here's what real science has to say about the latter: Exercise did not reduce all-cause mortality and incident CVD in older adults or in people with chronic conditions, based on RCTs comprising ∼50,000 participants https://scholar.google.com/scholar?cluster=10512580439138189... The average sedentary HN reader, take comfort! Being a gym rat is good for you. Forcing yourself to become a gym rat from being sedentary has unclear benefits regarding hard outcomes. |
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'hard' does a lot of work in that sentence. Try running up a few flight of stairs if you're sedentary compared to when you're in reasonable shape or try to take a fall if you're skinny compared with some more muscles on your skeleton, or just sitting in your chair for eight hours for that matter.
This is basically 'torture the data long enough until it tells you what you want' to finding an excuse to not hit the gym. Some studies on elderly people with vague exercise programs with probably no change in physique tells you nothing about middle-aged adults.