HKUMed study highlights that walking speed is an important marker of physiological resilience related to cancer risk. Pictured are Professor Cheung Ching-lung (right) and Dr Jonathan Mak Ka-long.
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Is it because people who walk faster tend to have less risk for developing lung cancer, or the other way around? Correlation does not mean causation, and from the article I find that walking speed is a marker for the risk of lung cancer, not “you should walk faster to prevent lung cancer”.
Is it because people who walk faster tend to have less risk for developing lung cancer, or the other way around? Correlation does not mean causation, and from the article I find that walking speed is a marker for the risk of lung cancer, not “you should walk faster to prevent lung cancer”.