New Report on Exercise and Combating Chronic Illness

Good Morning America
Good Morning AmericaMar 30, 2026

Why It Matters

The study suggests that modest increases in vigorous exercise could dramatically cut chronic disease rates and mortality, prompting a potential overhaul of exercise guidelines and offering a low‑cost strategy for population health improvement.

Key Takeaways

  • Vigorous exercise cuts risk of eight chronic diseases dramatically
  • Small weekly bursts of intensity lower mortality by 46%
  • Immune‑related inflammatory disorders benefit most from high intensity
  • Metabolic diseases respond to overall activity volume, not just intensity
  • Just 15‑25 minutes of vigorous activity weekly yields health gains

Summary

A new epidemiological study examined whether exercise intensity matters more than total volume in preventing chronic disease. Researchers followed roughly 400,000 adults—about 90,000 with accelerometer data and 300,000 via surveys—over 8‑14 years, averaging ages 50‑60.

The analysis found that a higher proportion of vigorous‑intensity activity was linked to a 30‑60% lower incidence of eight major chronic conditions, including diabetes, cardiovascular disease, dementia, liver disease, and chronic respiratory disease, and a 46% reduction in all‑cause mortality. Benefits appeared even with modest increases in vigorous effort, and the strongest effects were seen for immune‑mediated disorders such as psoriasis, rheumatoid arthritis, lupus, and inflammatory bowel disease.

Dr. Tara Narula explained that brief, high‑intensity bursts—like sprint intervals, stair climbs, or playing tag—can be integrated into daily life. The researchers estimate that an extra 15‑25 minutes of vigorous activity per week—roughly two minutes a day—can trigger physiological changes such as improved cardiac output, vascular flexibility, respiratory efficiency, neuroplasticity, and reduced inflammation.

If confirmed, these findings could reshape public‑health recommendations, shifting focus from total minutes of moderate activity to incorporating short bouts of higher intensity. Clinicians may begin advising patients, especially those at risk for inflammatory diseases, to add brief vigorous sessions while tailoring intensity to individual health status.

Original Description

ABC News' Dr. Tara Narula explains a new study suggesting exercise intensity may matter more than total activity in preventing some chronic diseases.
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