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Most
Adults don’t realize Activity Lowers Colon
Cancer Risk
Newswise — Many experts now consider colon
cancer a largely preventable disease, but a
new study finds that primary care doctors
might not always inform patients about one
important step they can take to reduce their
risk: becoming more physically active.
When researchers analyzed survey data from
1,932 adults who answered questions about
colon cancer risks, only 15 percent listed
physical activity as a means of reducing
their risk.
Yet a sedentary lifestyle accounts for as
many as 14 percent of all colon cancer cases
in the United States.
Highly active individuals have a 30 percent
to 40 percent lower risk of developing colon
cancer, according to the researchers.
Several factors contribute to the
information gap, according to study
co-author Elliot Coups.
“Patients
may not be learning this information from
their health care providers and information
regarding colon cancer prevention is not as
well publicized as it could be.”
The study appears in the August issue of the
journal Patient Education and Counseling.
Doctors might find it easier to promote the
general benefits of exercise, without
specifically mentioning colon cancer, even
to a patient who has a family history or has
other risk factors, said Coups, at the
Division of Population Science at the Fox
Chase Cancer Center in Cheltenham, Pa.
“In the context of busy clinic visits, it is
in some ways efficient for patients to be
reminded that physical activity is good for
their health in general,” Coups added.
“Going through each specific health benefit
of physical activity would take considerable
time.”
Doctors might also need to offer more
information about what it means to be
physically active, as patients could imagine
it involves dramatic lifestyle alterations,
he said.
There is a strong benefit in going from
completely sedentary to some modest levels
of activity, such as walking two to three
hours a week or gardening, said Edward
Giovannucci, M.D., a professor at the
Harvard School of Public Health.
“Sedentary people should first set such
moderate, achievable goals. More benefits
could accrue from higher levels and more
intense exercise, such as jogging, running
or tennis.
To some extent, more may be better, but it
is important to note that a little is much
better than nothing.”
Because studies might skew toward cultural
norms and 40 percent of Americans never
engage in leisure time physical activity,
inactivity could be a factor in over 14
percent of the estimated 112,000 cases of
colon cancer diagnosed each year,
Giovannucci said.
“While many people are vaguely aware that
exercise is good, the idea that exercise
specifically prevents a large proportion of
a common cancer may make an impact on the
patient,” he said.
Patient Education and Counseling is an
international peer reviewed research journal
publishing 15 issues per year by Elsevier.
For more information on the journal, please
contact Sean Evans at s.evans@elsevier.com.
Visit the journal website at http://www.elsevier.com/locate/pec.
Coups EJ, Hay J, Ford JS. “Awareness of the
role of physical activity in colon cancer
prevention.” Patient Educ Couns 71(2), 2008.
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