• Home
  • Practice Focus
    • Facial Plastic/Reconstructive
    • Head and Neck
    • Laryngology
    • Otology/Neurotology
    • Pediatric
    • Rhinology
    • Sleep Medicine
    • How I Do It
    • TRIO Best Practices
  • Business of Medicine
    • Health Policy
    • Legal Matters
    • Practice Management
    • Tech Talk
    • AI
  • Literature Reviews
    • Facial Plastic/Reconstructive
    • Head and Neck
    • Laryngology
    • Otology/Neurotology
    • Pediatric
    • Rhinology
    • Sleep Medicine
  • Career
    • Medical Education
    • Professional Development
    • Resident Focus
  • ENT Perspectives
    • ENT Expressions
    • Everyday Ethics
    • From TRIO
    • The Great Debate
    • Letter From the Editor
    • Rx: Wellness
    • The Voice
    • Viewpoint
  • TRIO Resources
    • Triological Society
    • The Laryngoscope
    • Laryngoscope Investigative Otolaryngology
    • TRIO Combined Sections Meetings
    • COSM
    • Related Otolaryngology Events
  • Search

ENT Myth Buster: Take 10,000 Steps Daily for Good Health?

by Renée Bacher • February 11, 2020

  • Tweet
  • Email
Print-Friendly Version

Can’t find the hours in a day to log your daily 10,000 steps for good health? Good news: A new study shows that walking as few as 4,400 steps per day was significantly related to lower mortality and that those rates continued to decrease with more steps, leveling off at approximately 7,500 steps per day. The study, “Association of Step Volume and Intensity With All-Cause Mortality in Older Women,” was recently published in JAMA Internal Medicine (2019;179:1105-1112).

You Might Also Like

  • Otolaryngology’s Gender Wage Gap
  • How Otolaryngology Can Address the Gender Gap
  • What Is the Effect of ACGME Duty Hours Regulations?
  • The Female Question: Should more be done to increase the ranks of female otolaryngologists?
Explore This Issue
February 2020

So where did that magic 10,000-steps-per-day recommendation come from? The study’s lead author, I-Min Lee, MD, MPH, ScD, a professor in the department of epidemiology at the Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health, said that while we often hear the number 10,000 cited as a daily step goal, the basis for this number is unclear.

“It likely originated as a marketing tool,” she said, noting that in 1965 the Yamasa Clock and Instrument Company in Japan sold a pedometer called “Manpo-kei,” which in Japanese means “10,000 step meter.”

Dr. Lee said that for many older people, 10,000 steps per day can be a daunting goal, which is why she and her colleagues wanted to investigate whether this was necessary for lower mortality rates in older women.

© Syda Productions / shutterstock.com

© Syda Productions / shutterstock.com

The researchers set out to examine the associations of number of steps per day and stepping intensity with all-cause mortality, and the prospective cohort study included 18,289 U.S. women from the Women’s Health Study who agreed to participate by wearing an accelerometer during waking hours for seven days between 2011 and 2015. Of these women, 16,741 were compliant wearers (≤10 h/d of wear on ≤4 days). Their results were analyzed between 2018 and 2019.

The study’s limitations, according to Dr. Lee, are two-fold: Only mortality was studied, and there are other health outcomes they will examine in the future; also, the participants were older women, although she says the findings likely apply to older men. For younger individuals, Dr. Lee said that while they know ‘some is good; more is better,’ it is unclear that maximum risk reduction for mortality occurs at 7,500 steps per day.

As for the concern that seven days of wear is a limitation, Dr. Lee doesn’t believe it is. “In a subgroup of women, we asked participants to wear the device for multiple observation periods over three years,” she said, “and only seven days of wear is a good representation for the longer period.”

Pages: 1 2 | Single Page

Filed Under: ENT Expressions Tagged With: Myth busterIssue: February 2020

You Might Also Like:

  • Otolaryngology’s Gender Wage Gap
  • How Otolaryngology Can Address the Gender Gap
  • What Is the Effect of ACGME Duty Hours Regulations?
  • The Female Question: Should more be done to increase the ranks of female otolaryngologists?

The Triological SocietyENTtoday is a publication of The Triological Society.

Polls

Have you invented or patented something that betters the field of otolaryngology?

View Results

Loading ... Loading ...
  • Polls Archive

Top Articles for Residents

  • Applications Open for Resident Members of ENTtoday Edit Board
  • How To Provide Helpful Feedback To Residents
  • Call for Resident Bowl Questions
  • New Standardized Otolaryngology Curriculum Launching July 1 Should Be Valuable Resource For Physicians Around The World
  • Do Training Programs Give Otolaryngology Residents the Necessary Tools to Do Productive Research?
  • Popular this Week
  • Most Popular
  • Most Recent
    • The Dramatic Rise in Tongue Tie and Lip Tie Treatment

    • The Best Site for Pediatric TT Placement: OR or Office?

    • Rating Laryngopharyngeal Reflux Severity: How Do Two Common Instruments Compare?

    • Otolaryngologists Are Still Debating the Effectiveness of Tongue Tie Treatment

    • The Road Less Traveled—at Least by Otolaryngologists

    • The Dramatic Rise in Tongue Tie and Lip Tie Treatment

    • Rating Laryngopharyngeal Reflux Severity: How Do Two Common Instruments Compare?

    • Is Middle Ear Pressure Affected by Continuous Positive Airway Pressure Use?

    • Otolaryngologists Are Still Debating the Effectiveness of Tongue Tie Treatment

    • Complications for When Physicians Change a Maiden Name

    • Leaky Pipes—Time to Focus on Our Foundations
    • You Are Among Friends: The Value Of Being In A Group
    • How To: Full Endoscopic Procedures of Total Parotidectomy
    • How To: Does Intralesional Steroid Injection Effectively Mitigate Vocal Fold Scarring in a Rabbit Model?
    • What Is the Optimal Anticoagulation in HGNS Surgery in Patients with High-Risk Cardiac Comorbidities?

Follow Us

  • Contact Us
  • About Us
  • Advertise
  • The Triological Society
  • The Laryngoscope
  • Laryngoscope Investigative Otolaryngology
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of Use
  • Cookies

Wiley

Copyright © 2025 by John Wiley & Sons, Inc. All rights reserved, including rights for text and data mining and training of artificial technologies or similar technologies. ISSN 1559-4939