Researchers who followed the health of nearly 500 older
people for almost a decade found that those who walked more quickly were less
likely to die over the course of the study.
The findings, the researchers said, suggest that gait speed may be a good
predictor of long-term survival, even in people who otherwise appear basically
healthy. The study was presented at a conference of the Gerontological Society
of America.
In a related study, appearing in the November issue of The Journal of the
American Geriatrics Society, the researchers also found that people whose
walking speed improved reduced their risk of death.
"We don't know why," said one of the authors, Stephanie A. Studenski of the
University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine. "Did some of these people exercise?
Did some of these people have health conditions that were treated and improved?"
The study presented at the conference reported that nine years after their gait
speed was measured, 77 percent of those people described as slow had died, 50
percent of those considered medium and 27 percent of those considered fast.