Incidence of death during jogging in Rhode Island from 1975 through 1980
- 14 May 1982
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Medical Association (AMA) in JAMA
- Vol. 247 (18) , 2535-2538
- https://doi.org/10.1001/jama.247.18.2535
Abstract
In the 6 yr from 1975-1980, 12 men died during jogging in the state of Rhode Island. The cause of death in 11 was coronary heart disease (CHD). One man died of an acute gastrointestinal hemorrhage. The prevalence of jogging in the Rhode Island population was determined using a random-digit telephone survey. Among men aged 30-64 yr, 7.4 .+-. 2.6% (mean .+-. SE) reported jogging at least twice a week. The incidence of death during jogging for men of this age group was 1 death per year for every 7620 joggers, or .apprx. 1 death per 396,000 man-hours of jogging. This rate is 7 times the estimated death rate from CHD during more sedentary activities in Rhode Island and suggests that exercise contributes to sudden death in susceptible persons. The occurrence of only 1 death per 7620 joggers per year demonstrates that the risk of exercise is small and suggests that the routine exercise testing of healthy subjects before exercise training is not justified.This publication has 2 references indexed in Scilit: