Exercise Helps Girls Fend Off Breast Cancer Later

Exercise Helps Girls Fend Off Breast Cancer Later
photo by: bam0027
The Nemours Foundation

Fitness should be a part of women's regular routine to help curb all kinds of serious conditions — from heart disease and diabetes to cancer and osteoporosis. But now a new study suggests that women's breast cancer risks, in particular, can be greatly reduced if they begin incorporating exercise into their lifestyle as early as their preteens and teens.

As part of an enormous national health study, almost 65,000 24- to 42-year-old nurses answered questions about their activity levels spanning as far back as age 12. The researchers found that the women who had been regularly active throughout their adolescence were almost 25% less apt to get breast cancer before menopause.

And those who'd stayed active (doing things like running more than 3 hours or walking more than 13 hours a week) from ages 12 to 22 had the greatest reduction in breast cancer risk.

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