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Inactivity 'killing as many as smoking'

By Nick Triggle Health correspondent, BBC News

A lack of exercise is now causing as many deaths as smoking across the world, a

study suggests.

The report, published in the Lancet to coincide with the build-up to the

Olympics, estimates that about a third of adults are not doing enough physical

activity, causing 5.3m deaths a year.

That equates to about one in 10 deaths from diseases such as heart disease,

diabetes and breast and colon cancer.

Researchers said the problem was now so bad it should be treated as a pandemic.

And they said tackling it required a new way of thinking, suggesting the public

needed to be warned about the dangers of inactivity rather than just reminded

of the benefits of being active.

Exercise can...

Help with insomnia

Strengthen bones

Help you to manage stress, anxiety and even depression

Source: BBC health

How to make your lifestyle more healthy

The team of 33 researchers drawn from centres across the world also said

governments needed to look at ways to make physical activity more convenient,

affordable and safer.

It is recommended that adults do 150 minutes of moderate exercise, such as

brisk walking, cycling or gardening, each week.

The Lancet study found people in higher income countries were the least active

with those in the UK among the worst, as nearly two-thirds of adults were

judged not to be doing enough.

The researchers admitted comparisons between countries were difficult because

the way activity was estimated may have differed from place to place.

Nonetheless, they said they remained confident that their overall conclusion

was valid.

Pedro Hallal, one of the lead researchers, said: "With the upcoming 2012

Olympic Games, sport and physical activity will attract tremendous worldwide

attention.

"Although the world will be watching elite athletes from many countries compete

in sporting events... most spectators will be quite inactive.

"The global challenge is clear - make physical activity a public health

priority throughout the world to improve health and reduce the burden of

disease."

Prof Lindsey Davies, president of the UK Faculty of Public Health, agreed.

"We need to do all we can to make it easy for people to look after their health

and get active as part of their daily lives," she said.

"Our environment has a significant part to play. For example, people who feel

unsafe in their local park will be less likely to use it."

But others questioned equating smoking with inactivity.

While smoking and inactivity kill a similar number of people, smoking rates are

much lower than the number of inactive people, making smoking more risky to the

individual.

Dr Claire Knight, of Cancer Research UK, said: "When it comes to preventing

cancer, stopping smoking is by far the most important thing you can do."

Case study

Bogota

From Monday to Saturday, the streets of the Colombian capital of Bogota are

packed with cars.

The city - one of the largest in South America - is a teeming metropolis, home

to more than seven million people.

But on a Sunday vehicles are nowhere to be seen. Instead, the streets are taken

over by pedestrians and cyclists, thanks to Ciclovia, a traffic-free streets

initiative run by the city authorities.

The scheme, backed by successive mayors, has been running in one guise or

another since the mid-1970s.

It now covers nearly 100km of roads in the centre of the city on Sundays and

public holidays.

But as well as making Bogota a quieter place to roam, the ban on cars also has

a health benefit.

Research has shown about a million residents regularly walk around on a Sunday,

a fifth of whom say they would be inactive if it were not for the ban on

vehicles.

Dr Michael Pratt, who was involved in the Lancet research on physical

inactivity, said the Bogota scheme was a "wonderful example" of how governments

could be encouraging more exercise.

Sedentary lifestyle can kill