City
Epaper

7,000 daily steps can cut your risk of cancer, depression, death: The Lancet

By IANS | Updated: July 24, 2025 11:59 IST

New Delhi, July 24 Just 7,000 daily steps can be key to reducing your risk of developing a ...

Open in App

New Delhi, July 24 Just 7,000 daily steps can be key to reducing your risk of developing a range of chronic diseases like cancer, diabetes, and cognitive issues like depression, dementia, as well as death, according to a new study published in the journal The Lancet Public Health on Thursday.

The comprehensive review, including 57 studies, analysed data from over 160,000 adults, and found that walking approximately 7,000 steps per day is associated with reductions in the risk of several serious health outcomes.

The 7,000 steps aided in reducing the risk of cardiovascular disease (by 25 per cent), cancer (by 6 per cent), type 2 diabetes (by 14 per cent), dementia (by 38 per cent), depression (by 22 per cent), and falls (by 28 per cent). The all-cause mortality was cut down by nearly 50 per cent.

Notably, while the current unofficial target of 10,000 steps per day, the study highlighted that 7,000 steps daily may be more realistic, particularly for less active people.

“Although 10,000 steps per day can still be a viable target for those who are more active, 7,000 steps per day is associated with clinically meaningful improvements in health outcomes and might be a more realistic and achievable target for some,” said corresponding author Prof Ding Ding, from The Charles Perkins Centre, at The University of Sydney in Australia.

The study also revealed that even modest step counts (around 4,000 steps per day) are linked to better health compared to very low activity (around 2,000 steps per day).

For some conditions, such as heart disease, health benefits continued to increase beyond 7,000 steps, but for most conditions, the benefits tended to level off.

However, the team also acknowledged limitations, such as the small number of studies available, particularly for cancer and dementia, and a lack of age-specific analysis and biases at the individual study level.

Yet, the findings underscore the value of using daily step counts as a straightforward way to measure physical activity, the researchers said.

They suggest these results could help shape future public health guidelines and recommendations, encouraging more people to track their steps as a practical way to improve their health.

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Open in App

Related Stories

InternationalSocial media platforms required to deactivate accounts of under-16s under Australian ban

BusinessAmadeus chosen by CIT to modernize tech stack and improve content offering

NationalCoimbatore Corporation to launch rooftop garden as part of green drive

BusinessUNITED SIKHS Continues to Lead Relief Efforts for Punjab's Displaced Communities

BusinessRopner Search and Lewis Sanders Complete Strategic Merger to Form Full Service Legal Recruitment Powerhouse

Health Realted Stories

HealthMaha CM to develop a comprehensive policy for cancer treatment

HealthMaha govt approves corpus fund for health treatment of over Rs 5 lakh, says CM Fadnavis

HealthGujarat to launch 'Swasth Nari, Sashakt Parivar' campaign from Sep 17

HealthDengue: India reports 49,573 cases, 42 deaths till Aug; govt rolls out 8-pillar strategy to curb

Health'Modiji took care of me like a father': Piyush Goyal shares how PM arranged yoga expert for his throat problem