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A new study from researchers at the University of Toronto's Dalla Lana School of Public Health suggests that improving your cardiorespiratory fitness level may help protect you from COVID-19.

The findings, published last week in the journal PLOS One, indicate that fit people have a of dying from the disease.

"One of the really cool findings of this study is that anyone with an above low level of is better protected," says Rebecca Christensen, a Ph.D. student and lead author of the study. "Running once in a blue moon won't protect you but if you are running regularly, you're doing fine."

The researchers examined a cohort of 2,690 adults from the UK Biobank Study and focused solely on the risk associated with death and the likelihood of catching the virus. They found no significant association between level of and risk of infection. The study did not examine disease severity which would include hospitalization.

The data range was limited to ages 49 to 80, but the sample was large enough to look at COVID-specific death.

The team observed physical activity by percentile within ten-year age bands given the UK Biobank's limited variables. The lowest 20th percentile was categorized as low fitness; the 40th to 80th percentile was moderate; and above the 80th percentile was above average.

Researchers observed that even low-to-moderate exercise seems to make a difference.

"Someone who just goes from doing no fitness to doing some fitness, could see appreciable benefits. And that's why we pulled data based on age and activity-level thresholds," Christensen says. "We want to see if you could just do something, will it have an impact? The answer is yes—as long as you're doing something consistently."

Physical activity declines with age but "if you're fitter for people within your age group, are you going to have a benefit? The answer is still yes," Christensen says.

A routine must include a cardio intense workout, one where you break a sweat or are breathing heavily says Christensen, but you don't need to be a marathon runner. The greatest benefit is in moving from inactivity to some consistent amount of physical activity.

There are known cases of athletes catching COVID-19. Christensen says that the nature of their work increases the likelihood of catching COVID-19 as most are exercising in an environment with others in close settings. The severity of symptoms could be linked to the physical stress of the athlete's intense workouts, she adds.

"People who exercise a lot can actually have a decrease in their immune system by over exercising," she notes.

The World Health Organization recently doubled its recommended physical activity guideline. "We've got up to 300 minutes (about five hours) instead of 150 minutes (about two and a half hours) per week. So, we're starting to see the importance of physical activity."

Christensen advises, "the sooner you start, the better and then you'll build up. You can make quite large gains when you go from doing nothing to doing anything."

More information: Rebecca A. G. Christensen et al. The association of estimated cardiorespiratory fitness with COVID-19 incidence and mortality: A cohort study, PLOS ONE (2021). DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0250508

Journal information: PLoS ONE