Physical Activity: Key Facts
Physical Activity: Key Facts
Physical Activity: Key Facts
Key facts
Insufficient physical activity is 1 of the 10 leading risk factors for death worldwide.
Insufficient physical activity is a key risk factor for noncommunicable diseases
(NCDs) such as cardiovascular diseases, cancer and diabetes.
Physical activity has significant health benefits and contributes to prevent NCDs.
Globally, 1 in 4 adults is not active enough.
More than 80% of the world's adolescent population is insufficiently physically
active.
Policies to address insufficient physical activity are operational in 56% of WHO
Member States.
WHO Member States have agreed to reduce insufficient physical activity by 10%
by 2025.
Regular physical activity of moderate intensity such as walking, cycling, or doing sports
has significant benefits for health. At all ages, the benefits of being physically active
outweigh potential harm, for example through accidents. Some physical activity is better
than doing none. By becoming more active throughout the day in relatively simple ways,
people can quite easily achieve the recommended activity levels.
Regular and adequate levels of physical activity:
improve muscular and cardiorespiratory fitness;
improve bone and functional health;
reduce the risk of hypertension, coronary heart disease, stroke, diabetes, breast
and colon cancer and depression;
reduce the risk of falls as well as hip or vertebral fractures; and
are fundamental to energy balance and weight control.
Insufficient physical activity is 1 of the 10 leading risk factors for global mortality and is
on the rise in many countries, adding to the burden of NCDs and affecting general health
worldwide. People who are insufficiently active have a 20% to 30% increased risk of death
compared to people who are sufficiently active.
Globally, around 23% of adults aged 18 and over were not active enough in 2010 (men
20% and women 27%). In high-income countries, 26% of men and 35% of women were
insufficiently physically active, as compared to 12% of men and 24% of women in lowincome countries. Low or decreasing physical activity levels often correspond with a high
or rising gross national product. The drop in physical activity is partly due to inaction
during leisure time and sedentary behaviour on the job and at home. Likewise, an
increase in the use of "passive" modes of transportation also contributes to insufficient
physical activity.
Globally, 81% of adolescents aged 11-17 years were insufficiently physically active in
2010. Adolescent girls were less active than adolescent boys, with 84% vs. 78% not
meeting WHO recommendations.
Several environmental factors which are linked to urbanization can discourage people
from becoming more active, such as:
fear of violence and crime in outdoor areas
high-density traffic
low air quality, pollution
lack of parks, sidewalks and sports/recreation facilities.
Both, society in general and individuals can take action to increase physical activity. In
2013, WHO Member States agreed to a target of reducing insufficient physical activity by
10% by 2025 and included strategies to achieve such in the "Global Action Plan for the
Prevention and Control of Noncommunicable Diseases 2013-2020".
Global Action Plan for the Prevention and Control of NCDs 2013-2020
Policies to increase physical activity aim to ensure that:
in cooperation with relevant sectors physical activity is promoted through
activities of daily living;
walking, cycling and other forms of active transportation are accessible and safe
for all;
labour and workplace policies encourage physical activity;
schools have safe spaces and facilities for students to spend their free time
actively;
quality physical education supports children to develop behaviour patterns that
will keep them physically active throughout their lives; and
sports and recreation facilities provide opportunities for everyone to do sports.
Policies and plans to address physical inactivity have been developed in about 80% of
WHO Member States, though these were operational in only 56% of the countries in 2013.
National and local authorities are also adopting policies in a range of sectors to promote
and facilitate physical activity.
WHO response
The Global Strategy on Diet, Physical Activity and Health, adopted by the World Health
Assembly in 2004, describes the actions needed to increase physical activity worldwide.
The Strategy urges stakeholders to take action at global, regional and local levels to
increase physical activity.
The "Global Recommendations on Physical Activity for Health", published by WHO in
2010, focus on primary prevention of NCDs through physical activity. It proposes different
policy options to reach the recommended levels of physical activity globally, such as:
the development and implementation of national guidelines for health-enhancing
physical activity;
the integration of physical activity within other related policy sectors, in order to
secure that policies and action plans are coherent and complementary;
the use of mass media to raise awareness of the benefits of being physically
active;
the surveillance and monitoring of actions to promote physical activity.
Global recommendations: physical activity for health
To measure physical activity in adults, WHO has developed the Global Physical Activity
Questionnaire (GPAQ). This questionnaire helps countries monitor insufficient physical
activity as one of the main NCD risk factors. The GPAQ has been integrated into the WHO
STEPwise approach, which is a surveillance system for the main NCD risk factors.
Global physical activity surveillance
A module to assess insufficient physical activity among schoolchildren has been
integrated into the Global school-based student health survey (GSHS). The GSHS is a
WHO/US CDC surveillance project designed to help countries measure and assess the
behavioural risk factors and protective factors in 10 key areas among young people aged
13 to 17 years.
In 2013, the World Health Assembly agreed on a set of global voluntary targets which
include a 25% reduction of premature mortality from NCDs and a 10% decrease in
insufficient physical activity by 2025. The Global Action Plan for the Prevention and
Control of Noncommunicable Diseases 2013-2020 guides Member States, WHO and
other UN Agencies on how to effectively achieve these targets. A sector specific toolkit is
under development by WHO to assist Member States implement actions and achieve the
targets.
WHO has established several partnerships to help support Member States in their efforts
to promote physical activity these include the United Nations Educational, Scientific and
Cultural Organization (UNESCO) and United Nations Sport for Development and Peace
(UNOSPD) and a Memo of Understanding with the International Olympic Committee (IOC).