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A slight reduction was seen in major cardiovascular events; very low certainty of serious adverse events was reported.
9,000 to 10,500 steps/day was associated with the lowest mortality risk, regardless of sedentary time.
Regular physical activity was linked to a reduced risk for all-cause mortality in women and men, with a greater reduction for women.
Additional mortality benefits were found at a moderate-to-high versus low step cadence.
The benefits include a better cardiometabolic risk profile as well as lower mortality.
Hormone therapy was no aid for cardiovascular disease prevention, and calcium/vitamin D supplementation was no aid for universal fracture prevention.
Significant improvements were seen for produce consumption, physical activity, non-high-density lipoprotein cholesterol and HbA1c.
A strong recommendation was given for the addition of an SGLT-2 or GLP-1 agonist to metformin, and lifestyle modifications.
Similarly, very low diastolic blood pressure increases the cardiovascular mortality risk with diabetes.
An increase was seen in physically and mentally unhealthy days during past month, years of life lost and age-adjusted all-cause mortality rate.