A study finds rising temperatures may cause up to 700,000 deaths and $3.68bn productivity losses annually by 2050 due to ...
The impact of climate change on physical activity patterns poses serious health risks and economic challenges, particularly ...
By 2050, scientists expect higher temperatures to make people less active. This could harm human health and the economy.
New research suggests rising global temperatures are likely to contribute to a decrease in physical activity. A group of researchers in South America studied more than 20 years' worth of temperature ...
Physical inactivity is already a major global health problem, with about one in three adults failing to meet WHO guidelines for weekly exercise, the researchers said ...
By 2050, an average temperature above 27.8°C per month would increase physical inactivity by 1.5 percentage points globally and 1.85 percentage points in low- and middle-income countries.
Rising global temperatures will lead to millions more people becoming physically inactive and cause an estimated half a million premature deaths a year, new modelling suggests.1 An analysis of data ...
A new study shows that physical inactivity is causing one in 10 deaths worldwide. The study, published in British medical journal The Lancet, has likened physical inactivity to the dangers of smoking ...
University of Missouri scientists have found that just 10 days of physical inactivity can have negative effects on memory and learning. A recently-published study conducted on female rats shows for ...
Rising global temperatures may increase physical inactivity worldwide by 2050, raising health risks and economic costs, a new study warns ...