Image: iStock.
When anyone talks about working up a sweat, Salt N Pepa’s “Push It” immediately starts playing in my head and I have to physically stop myself from dancing like a very uncoordinated wannabe rapper.
That probably tells you a lot about how much I exercise (i.e not often, aside from random bursts of dancing) but turns out Salt N Pepa might have been onto something.
Yes, a new study has found that “Workin’ up a sweat” during exercise is the key to living longer. Nice.
Unfortunately that means unless you're seriously speed walking up a mountain, those walks you were doing to keep fit? Not doing you as much good as you thought.
The Australian study looked at the data of more than 200,000 Australians over the age of 45, and found a correlation between vigorous exercise and lower risk of mortality.
For the purpose of the study, vigorous activity was defined as "anything that increases your heart rate and breathing a lot and caused you to sweat. On a scale of one to 10, where 10 was your absolute limit, anything around seven or eight counted as vigorous".
The good news is that even the smallest amount of sweat-inducing exercise can make a difference.
Study author Klaus Gebel said the research shows people who regularly did vigorous exercise were up to 13 per cent less likely to die prematurely than those who did just moderate exercise.
RELATED: 8 proven ways to become an ‘exercise person’.
Even if less than a third of your exercise is vigorous (ahem, my fitness routine), you could see a nine per cent decrease in the risk of early death. (Post continues after gallery.)