All these other step counts; which one is your competent? doctor enamored of?
Your competent? doctor better get you recovered enough to do whatever number of steps you want.
Oh no, your doctors completely fucking failed at that task, and you haven't fired them yet?!
Well, there's all these other numbers for walking that your doctor already told you about, right? Choose one.
Other walking prevention items:
My numbers for steps.
10,000 Steps A Day? How Many You Really Need To Boost Longevity - 4,400
This one suggests 8900 steps a day:
Can Exercise Protect Against Alzheimer's?
Exactly How Many Steps You Need to Take a Day to Not Gain Weight - 15,000
Every 2,000 steps a day could help keep premature death at bay
Scientists Reveal the Right Number of Steps to Walk to Stay Healthy (Hint: It's Not 10K)4 min read
World Walking Day: Experts Recommend 30-Minute Daily Walk To Prevent Cancer, Stroke, Others October 2024
The latest here:
How Many Steps Do You Actually Need If You Sit All Day?
7nbsp;If you have a desk job, you probably already know the feeling. You look up from your screen and realize you’ve barely moved in hours. Maybe you try to make up for it with a workout later, or you tell yourself you’ll get more steps in tomorrow. It’s also easy to fall into an all-or-nothing mindset. If you didn’t make it to the gym or carve out time for a proper walk, it can feel like the smaller bits of movement don’t count. So you start to wonder, is a quick walk here and there actually doing anything? Or does it take something more structured to offset a full day of sitting? And if you do work out, does that cancel out all the sedentary hours? If you have a desk job, you probably already know the feeling. You look up from your screen and realize you’ve barely moved in hours. Maybe you try to make up for it with a workout later, or you tell yourself you’ll get more steps in tomorrow. It’s also easy to fall into an all-or-nothing mindset. If you didn’t make it to the gym or carve out time for a proper walk, it can feel like the smaller bits of movement don’t count. So you start to wonder, is a quick walk here and there actually doing anything? Or does it take something more structured to offset a full day of sitting? And if you do work out, does that cancel out all the sedentary hours. A new study?1 takes a more precise look at these questions, using real-world data to figure out how daily steps and sedentary time interact when it comes to long-term health.
Steps, sitting, & long-term health risk
Researchers pulled data from more than 15,000 adults enrolled in a large U.S. research program that tracks health over time. What makes this study different is how the data was collected. Instead of relying on self-reported activity, which can be unreliable, they used Fitbit devices to track daily steps and sedentary time over months and years. They then linked that movement data to participants’ medical records, looking for patterns between how much people sat, how much they moved, and whether they developed chronic conditions like diabetes, hypertension, sleep apnea, or heart disease. Participants ranged widely in their daily habits, but many were sedentary for anywhere from 8 to 14 hours a day. That gave researchers a way to compare how different step counts influenced health outcomes across varying levels of sitting time.
The most useful finding wasn’t about hitting a perfect step goal. It was about how much additional movement it takes to start shifting risk in the right direction. For people who spend most of the day sitting, adding somewhere between 1,700 and 5,500 steps per day was enough to meaningfully lower the risk of several chronic conditions. The exact number depended on the condition. On the lower end, around 1,700 extra steps was linked to reduced risk of obesity and fatty liver disease. On the higher end, closer to 5,000 steps was needed to offset risk for things like diabetes and COPD. This range reframes the goal. You don’t necessarily need to suddenly hit 10,000 steps if you’re starting from a sedentary baseline. Even a few thousand more steps than you’re currently getting can move the needle. At the same time, the study makes it clear that not all risks are equally responsive. For conditions like coronary artery disease and heart failure, higher step counts didn’t fully cancel out the effects of prolonged sitting. In other words, movement helps, but it doesn’t make long stretches of inactivity irrelevant.
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