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A walk a day keeps the cold away

October 29, 2007
Times of India

NEW YORK: It's no surprise that regular exercise, particularly brisk walking, can lower your risk of heart disease and diabetes, but did you know it may reduce the risk of catching common cold too? Yes, researchers in the US have carried out a study and found that exercise, like walking, for at least half-an-hour daily helps to ward off common old.

According Cornelia Ulrich of the Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Centre in Seattle, "There's a lot of anecdotal proof that exercise prevents infection, and colds in particular."

Ulrich and her team came to the conclusion after conducting a study of the effects of regular exercise on breast cancer in post-menopausal women. Half of the 115 women involved in the study were put on a programme in which they did moderate exercise five times a week. The other group did not exercise, but participated in a weekly stretching class.

It was found that the women in the non-exercise group suffered from twice as many colds as those who did exercise. The protection against colds among the exercise participants was greatest during the last three months of the trial, during which the non-exercisers had three times the risk of catching a cold. The effects of exercise on the immune system were seen in the active group despite the fact that they managed just 30 minutes of walking a day, on average, according to the findings reported in the American Journal of Medicine .