12/18/2025
Repost: Daily steps and disease risk, credit to Mark Hyman, MD (https://www.facebook.com/drmarkhyman)
Love this reminder from : a new meta-analysis in The Lancet Public Health pooled data from 57 studies (160,000+ people) and found:
- Around 7,000 steps/day = 47% lower all-cause mortality, 25% lower heart disease risk, 38% lower dementia risk
- Biggest benefits began at just 5,000–7,000 steps/day
- Every extra 2,000 steps was linked to lower disease risk
The average American walks fewer than 5,000 steps, meaning most of us are closer to the “sweet spot” than we think. If you can, aim for 5,000–7,000 steps daily and build from there. Pair steady movement with balanced meals (Rule of Thirds) for a powerful, realistic health foundation.
The reason is not “eat less, move more”, or “calories in, calories out”. Human bodies were made to move! Humans used to move all day to hunt food, forage food, prepare food, carry water, make tools, make clothing, and build and maintain shelters. Sitting all day at a computer is a lifestyle change consistent with modern times, and research has proven that it’s not good for our bodies.
So walk, run, dance, skip, or even do chores. Movement is good for us, whatever it looks like!
What’s your step goal this week? https://www.lauraduffynutrition.com/
Sources
• Mark Hyman, MD — Facebook post summarizing findings
• The Lancet Public Health — large meta-analysis of daily steps and health outcomes (57 studies; >160,000 participants)