Estimates of the number of people in England who attain or exceed vigorous intensity exercise by walking at 3 mph
Citation
Kelly, P., Murphy, M., Oja, P., Murtagh, E.M., Foster, C., (2011) ‘Estimates of the number of people in England who attain or exceed vigorous intensity exercise by walking at 3 mph’, Journal of Sports Sciences, 29(15), 1629-1634
Date
2011Author
Kelly, Paul
Oja, Pekka
Murtagh, Elaine
Foster, Charlie
Murphy, Marie H.
Peer Reviewed
YesMetadata
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Kelly, P., Murphy, M., Oja, P., Murtagh, E.M., Foster, C., (2011) ‘Estimates of the number of people in England who attain or exceed vigorous intensity exercise by walking at 3 mph’, Journal of Sports Sciences, 29(15), 1629-1634
Abstract
Walking is a safe, accessible and low cost activity, amenable to change and known to have great potential to increase physical
activity levels in sedentary individuals. The objective of this study is to estimate the proportion of the 2009 adult population
of England who would attain or exceed vigorous intensity activity (470% maximum heart rate [HRmax]) by walking at 3
mph. We conducted predictive impact modelling using participants’ (n¼1741, aged 25–64 years) cardiovascular fitness data
from treadmill walking tests. We combined this data with English population estimates adjusted for age and sex to estimate
the numbers of individuals that would exceed 70% HRmax (an intensity considered sufficient for fitness gains) when walking
at 3 mph (4.8 km h71). We estimate 1.5 million men (95% confidence interval [CI] 0.9–2.2 million) (from 13.4 million
corresponding to 11.6% (95% CI 7.0–16.2%)) and 3.9 million women (95% CI 3.0–4.8 million) (from 13.6 million
corresponding to 28.6% (95% CI 22.0–35.1%)) in England aged 25–64 years would benefit from regularly walking at 3 mph.
In total, a projected 5.4 million individuals (95% CI 3.9–6.9 million) aged 25–64 (from 26.97 million corresponding to
20.1% (95% CI 14.6–25.7%)) could benefit from walking at 3 mph. Our estimates suggest a considerable number of
individuals in the English population could receive fitness and health benefits by walking regularly at 3 mph. Physical activity
messages that promote walking at this speed may therefore have the potential to significantly impact national fitness levels
and health in England.
Keywords
WalkingFitness
Public Health