Research
Adherence
Step intensity (cadence) is positively correlated with step count and independently associated with lower risk of chronic diseases, though the relationship is less consistent than step count alone.
While total steps are the primary driver, walking faster (higher cadence) adds additional benefit. However, you do not need to obsess over speed; simply increasing your total daily steps will likely increase your average cadence and provide protection.
GoodQualifiesHIGH confidence
Daily step counts and intensity (defined using a steps per minute threshold that indicates slow walking) were positively correlated... Step intensity was also significantly associated with these outcomes.
Why this rating
Same high-quality observational data as N1.
Source
Association of step counts over time with the risk of chronic disease in the All of Us Research Program
Hiral Master et al. · Nature Medicine · 2022
cohort · n=6042Cited 214×
Read the paper This is one finding among thousands. Every one is graded and traced to its source, so you can see what the evidence actually supports. Browse the research →