Recent systematic evidence from 480,000 adults reveals three transformative findings about resistance training’s role in longevity. First, optimal resistance training produces a 27% mortality risk reduction—a clinically significant protective effect that rivals or exceeds many pharmaceutical interventions. Second, these benefits commence at remarkably modest commitment levels, with just 30-60 minutes of weekly training demonstrating measurable longevity gains, making resistance training accessible to populations with time constraints. Third and most importantly, resistance training’s protective mechanisms operate independently of cardiovascular exercise, meaning individuals derive unique survival advantages from strength work beyond traditional aerobic conditioning. This independence suggests distinct biological pathways—potentially involving metabolic regulation, muscle preservation, and functional capacity—that resistance training uniquely activates. For clinicians counseling patients on preventive health strategies, these findings provide robust justification for prescribing resistance training as a primary longevity intervention rather than a secondary fitness modality. The evidence supports integrating structured resistance protocols into comprehensive preventive health programs. Read the full article on GMJ Newsroom.
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