Friday, 29 March, 2024
HomeWeekly RoundupDiscovery: Capetonians the fittest, Bloem trails in last

Discovery: Capetonians the fittest, Bloem trails in last

Cape Town is the fittest city according to Discovery, and the people also drive better. According to a Health-e News report, for exercise levels, Johannesburg was ranked second and Pretoria third in Discovery Vitality’s Road to a Healthier South Africa report.

Research has shown that exercising for just a few hours a week can reduce a person’s risk of dying from any cause by up to 50%, according to head of Vitality Wellness, Dr Craig Nossel.

“We see (from our data) that for someone who exercises four or five times a week, the (health) cost comes down significantly and the risk of dying comes down significantly. Getting people to exercise is a critical component we should be prescribing,” he said.

The report draws on data from over a half a million South Africans in the six metropolitan cities who are part of Discovery’s Vitality programme. This is a scheme for members, incentivising them to exercise, eat healthier and drive more carefully through a points and rewards system.

Although the report did not provide possible reasons why Capetonians exercise more than people in Bloemfontein, which came in last place, Nossel suggested that the higher concentration of gyms and the city’s promotion of bicycle-use and walking through infrastructure could possibly explain the difference.

Men were also found to be up to 35% more active than women. Some of the barriers for women could be time constraints related to family responsibilities and “self-esteem” issues when exercising in busy spaces, said fitness guru Letshego Zulu, who lost her husband Gugu Zulu climbing Mount Kilimanjaro.

Through the Vitality app, drivers were also tracked for dangerous actions on the road. The best drivers resided in Cape Town, followed by Port Elizabeth and Bloemfontein with the worst driving being recorded in Durban. According to Professor Sebastian van As from the Red Cross War Memorial Children’s Hospital, “almost 90% of accidents are caused by bad driving – simple”.

Zulu said that one of the most important interventions is educating the public about the impact exercise has on health. “Lack of physical activity is one of the leading causes of non-communicable diseases (like diabetes, cancer and hypertension). And the trick is; we need to get moving.”

[link url="https://www.health-e.org.za/2018/09/13/cape-town-residents-are-the-most-fit-and-the-best-drivers/"]Health-e News report[/link]
[link url="https://www.discovery.co.za/assets/template-resources/vitality/the-road-to-a-healthier-sa.pdf"]Discovery report[/link]

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