(NaturalNews) Primary care doctors are failing to adequately inform their patients that regular exercise can significantly decrease their risk of colon cancer, according to a survey conducted by researchers from the Fox Chase Cancer Center in Cheltenham, Pa., and published in the journal
Patient Education and Counseling.
Research has demonstrated that people with highly active lifestyles are 30 to 40 percent less likely to develop colon cancer than their more sedentary cohorts. This effect is so striking that researchers have identified up to 14 percent of all
colon cancer cases in the United States as caused by a lack of
physical activity.
Yet in a survey of 1,932 adults, researchers found that only 15 percent of respondents listed physical activity as a way to reduce the risk of colon
cancer.
Study co-author Elliott Coups said that doctors can encourage
patients to exercise based on the general
health benefits alone, without mentioning
colon cancer specifically.
But a growing body of
research suggests that beyond its general health
benefits, exercise is a potent way of reducing the
risk of cancer specifically, especially
cancers of the breast, colon, prostate, ovaries and uterine lining (endometrial cancer). One study, for example, found that women who
exercise the most have a 23 percent lower risk of developing pre-menopause breast cancer than sedentary
women. This exercise level is equivalent to only 3.25 hours per week of running, or 13 hours of walking.
Researchers believe that these cancers, which are linked to levels of sex hormones in the
body, might be particularly affected by exercise because physical activity is known to regulate hormone levels.
Exercise has proven effective at reducing the risk of other cancers, as well. According to one Japanese study, people who are more physically active are 13 to 16 percent less likely to develop any kind of cancer. Studies on Western populations have shown an even stronger effect.
Sources for this story include:
www.upi.com; fredricksburg.com.
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