Translation of clinical practice to research: the VETS and ETHOS epidemiologic prospective cohorts
Jonathan Myers, Peter Kokkinos, Immanuel Babu Henry Samuel, Charles Faselis, Ross Fletcher, Victor Froelicher

TL;DR
Long-term studies ETHOS and VETS show that higher cardiorespiratory fitness is linked to better health outcomes and lower chronic disease risk.
Contribution
Long-term tracking of cardiorespiratory fitness and health outcomes in large cohorts to inform public health guidelines.
Findings
Higher cardiorespiratory fitness is inversely associated with chronic diseases like cardiovascular disease and cancer.
Improvements in fitness over time correlate with better health outcomes, while declines worsen outcomes.
CRF is linked to reduced healthcare costs and supports recommendations for physical activity promotion.
Abstract
For >30 years, the Exercise Testing and Health Outcomes Study (ETHOS) and the Veterans Exercise Testing Study (VETS) cohorts have contributed significantly to the understanding of the association between cardiorespiratory fitness (CRF), health outcomes, and the prevention of chronic disease. Multiple reports from these studies have consistently shown an inverse and graded association between higher CRF and the incidence of chronic conditions including cardiovascular disease, site-specific cancers, chronic kidney disease, rhythm disturbances, and neurological conditions. In addition, higher CRF is inversely related to health care costs. Among individuals whose CRF level improves over periods of time ranging from 5 to 7 years, improvements in health outcomes have been observed, and the converse is true among those who decrease CRF over time. The Veterans Administration Health Care System…
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Taxonomy
TopicsCardiovascular Function and Risk Factors · Nutrition and Health in Aging · Health disparities and outcomes
