Close Menu
Health Care Today
  • Home
  • News
  • Fitness
  • Nutrition
  • Skin Care
  • Women’s Health
  • More
    • Mental Well-Being
    • Sexual Health
    • Press Release
    • Editor’s Picks
What's On
Why every extra hour of uninterrupted sitting may raise risk

Why every extra hour of uninterrupted sitting may raise risk

July 3, 2026
“Focus on mental health”, a game to raise awareness and free speech in business

“Focus on mental health”, a game to raise awareness and free speech in business

July 3, 2026
Journalists Discuss Healthcare Costs’ Political Fallout, Concerns About Canceled ICE Facility

Journalists Discuss Healthcare Costs’ Political Fallout, Concerns About Canceled ICE Facility

July 3, 2026
GLP-1s tied to better outcomes for diabetes, peripheral artery disease

GLP-1s tied to better outcomes for diabetes, peripheral artery disease

July 3, 2026
Opioid substitution treatment: a significant reduction in mortality

Opioid substitution treatment: a significant reduction in mortality

July 3, 2026
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
Health Care Today
  • Home
  • News
  • Fitness
  • Nutrition
  • Skin Care
  • Women’s Health
  • More
    • Mental Well-Being
    • Sexual Health
    • Press Release
    • Editor’s Picks
Subscribe
Health Care Today
Home » Why every extra hour of uninterrupted sitting may raise risk
News

Why every extra hour of uninterrupted sitting may raise risk

staffBy staffJuly 3, 2026
Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Email Telegram WhatsApp Copy Link
Why every extra hour of uninterrupted sitting may raise risk

Share on Pinterest
A new study found that just one extra hour of sitting may raise cancer death risk. ljubaphoto/Getty Images
  • Researchers in the United Kingdom took a closer look at sedentary behavior, cancer risk, and cancer-related death.
  • They found that each additional hour per day of prolonged, uninterrupted sitting was associated with about a 9% higher risk of cancer-related death.
  • Each additional hour of sedentary time that was broken up by movement, however, was associated with a lower risk of cancer death.

Sedentary behavior is linked to health risks, and guidance typically focuses on total sedentary time rather than on whether that time is broken up with physical activity.

A new study found that the pattern of sedentary behavior may be just as important as the total amount of sitting time, especially concerning cancer.

The researchers observed an association between replacing prolonged sitting with physical activity and a lower risk of cancer. Depending on the activity’s intensity, the reduction in cancer mortality risk ranged from 8% to 22%.

Sedentary behavior is defined as being awake and sitting, reclining, or lying down with “low energy expenditure.”

According to the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services’ Physical Activity Guidelines, sedentary behavior is tied to a higher risk of many health issues, including type 2 diabetes and heart disease. Sedentary behavior is also linked to certain cancers and a higher risk of premature death.

The researchers in the new study wanted to determine whether the pattern of sedentary behavior, rather than just the total amount, was associated with cancer risk, and whether replacing prolonged sitting with physical activity might influence that risk.

The study used data from more than 91,000 adults in the U.K. Biobank, a large population-based cohort. Participants wore wrist accelerometers for 7 days to measure physical activity and sedentary behavior.

The researchers divided sedentary behavior into two main categories:

  • prolonged sedentary behavior (sitting for at least 30 minutes without interruption)
  • interrupted sedentary behavior (sitting time broken up by movement)

The scientists used around 12 years of records to track cancer diagnoses during follow-up.

After gathering the data, the researchers used statistical models to determine whether there was a relationship between sedentary behavior and cancer outcomes. They also used substitution models to estimate how replacing sitting time with other activities might affect those risks

Prolonged sedentary behavior showed higher overall cancer incidence, higher cancer mortality, and a greater risk of obesity-related and type 2 diabetes-related cancers.

Frequent interruptions of sedentary time with movement (such as household chores, walking, or vigorous exercise) were associated with lower cancer risk across multiple cancer types.

The researchers found a similar pattern when they examined cancer-related deaths.

Each additional hour of prolonged sitting carried about a 9% to 10% higher risk of cancer death. However, each additional hour of sedentary behavior interrupted corresponded to a lower risk of cancer death.

The benefits depended on the movement type and amount.

Replacing 1 hour of prolonged sitting with light physical activity was associated with a 12% reduction in cancer-related death risk. Replacing 30 minutes of moderate activity with vigorous activity was linked to a 8% reduced risk, and replacing just 5 minutes of prolonged sitting with vigorous activity was associated with a 22% lower risk.

Overall, the findings suggest that breaking up long periods of sitting with movement may be an important strategy for reducing cancer risk. Since this study is observational, more research is necessary to confirm the findings.

David Yashar, MD, a hematologist/oncologist at MemorialCare Todd Cancer Institute at Long Beach Medical Center, shared his thoughts on the study with Medical News Today. He explained why sedentary behaviors may lead to cancer.

“A sedentary lifestyle can lead to a person becoming overweight/obese,” Yashar explained. “We know that an increased amount of fat causes inflammation, which is a known risk factor for cancer.”

Yashar also noted that a sedentary lifestyle can contribute to hormonal imbalances, which “can lead to increased risk of hormone-sensitive cancers such as breast cancer.”

He said breaking up prolonged sitting with movement can “increase antioxidant defenses, which can therefore reduce reactive oxygen species.” This is important because reactive oxygen species lead to inflammation.

Yashar encouraged people to take a break from prolonged sitting by getting up every 15 minutes to “grab some water or walk around for a couple of minutes.”

Hector Perez, MD, a board certified bariatric surgeon at Renew Bariatrics and an advisor at Bariatric Journal, also spoke with MNT. While acknowledging that the findings indicating that prolonged sitting is unhealthy were not surprising, Perez said the fact that how people sit is more important than their cumulative sitting time was interesting.

“The study indicates that your body responds to the shape of that sedentary time, so a single unbroken 90-minute stretch appears to do something different than the same 90 minutes chopped into six smaller interrupted sessions,” explained Perez.

Perez cautioned people against interpreting the reported 9% higher risk of cancer death for each additional hour of prolonged sitting as an absolute risk. He reminded that the study found an association, not a direct cause.

Instead, Perez encouraged readers to focus on the study’s more practical findings, noting that replacing even a few minutes of prolonged sitting with physical activity could help reduce health risks. He said the study already reinforces an important clinical message: meeting daily exercise goals doesn’t necessarily offset the effects of spending the rest of the day sitting still.

“That box-checking mentality is exactly what this paper challenges,” Perez said.

Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email

Related Articles

GLP-1s tied to better outcomes for diabetes, peripheral artery disease

GLP-1s tied to better outcomes for diabetes, peripheral artery disease

July 3, 2026
Stress ages bone marrow stem cells via the gut in mice

Stress ages bone marrow stem cells via the gut in mice

July 3, 2026
New ‘SECmere’ blood test could spot Alzheimer’s-related changes sooner

New ‘SECmere’ blood test could spot Alzheimer’s-related changes sooner

July 2, 2026
Top Articles
Ways by Which Your Partner Impacts Your Life: Therapist Explains

Ways by Which Your Partner Impacts Your Life: Therapist Explains

January 8, 2020
Mobile Calls Associated With Risk of High Blood Pressure

Mobile Calls Associated With Risk of High Blood Pressure

January 6, 2020
Review: 7 Future Fashion Trends Shaping the Future of Fashion

Review: 7 Future Fashion Trends Shaping the Future of Fashion

January 10, 2020
Why every extra hour of uninterrupted sitting may raise risk

Why every extra hour of uninterrupted sitting may raise risk

July 3, 2026
Average Mobile Data Usage Now Exceeds 10GB Per Month

Average Mobile Data Usage Now Exceeds 10GB Per Month

January 5, 2020
Don't Miss
Chewing against hypersialorrhea? – Mental Health
Women's Health

Chewing against hypersialorrhea? – Mental Health

July 2, 2026

At Cadillac Hospital, the pilot study ChewDaily will evaluate the impact of chewing gum on…

A Mom Said Infant Formula Killed Her Baby. The Manufacturer Closed the File.

A Mom Said Infant Formula Killed Her Baby. The Manufacturer Closed the File.

July 2, 2026
Can Exercise Counteract a High-Fat Meal?

Can Exercise Counteract a High-Fat Meal?

July 2, 2026
New Disease Threats Follow Trump Administration’s Health Program Cuts

New Disease Threats Follow Trump Administration’s Health Program Cuts

July 2, 2026
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of use
  • Contact
© 2026 Health Care Today. All Rights Reserved.

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.