The  scientists tracked 592 middle-aged adults who participated in a study to  map diabetes levels across Australia between 2000-2005.  Participants underwent a health examination at the start of the study  and provided details about their eating and lifestyle habits. The volunteers were also given a pedometer and instructed on how to use it. Five years later, a checkup showed that  a higher daily step count was associated with a lower body-mass index  (BMI), lower waist-to-hip ratio and better insulin sensitivity, even  after adjusting for factors such as diet, smoking and alcohol intake. These  associations were independent of calorie intake and appeared to be  largely due to a change in weight, said the researchers at the Murdoch  Children's Research Institute in Melbourne. They calculated that a  sedentary person who changed his or her behavior and started walking  10,000 steps every day would achieve a threefold improvement in insulin  sensitivity, compared with a similar person who walked 3,000 steps a  day, five days a week. The 10,000 steps per day is a popular guideline, but a more recent recommendation is 3,000 steps per day, five days a week. "These  findings, confirming an independent beneficial role of higher daily  step count on body-mass index, waist-to-hip ratio and insulin  sensitivity, provide further support to promote higher physical activity  levels among middle-aged adults," the researchers concluded in a news  release. The study appears in the online edition of the British Medical Journal.
According to the researchers from Australia, the more you walk, the less chance you have of diabetes. 
Thursday, January 13, 2011
Walk More to Decrease Risk of Diabetes!
8:14 PM
  nbhcentral