Most adults in England are risking their health by failing to get enough exercise, research suggests.
A University of Bristol-led study found 80% failed to meet the government target of taking moderate exercise at least 12 times in a four-week period.
Better-off and better-educated adults were most likely to exercise, while the poorer and least educated were most likely to be inactive.
The study analysed exercise data for more than a million adults in England.
It found about 8% of adults who were physically able to walk had not walked for even five minutes continuously during a four-week period, while 46% had not walked for leisure for more than 30 minutes continuously.
Researchers said 88% had not been swimming, 90% had not used a gym and around 20% of people over the age of 16 had done only minimal amounts of physical activity.
Warm weatherThey say the findings provide evidence of a direct correlation between an individual's education, household income and local area deprivation and their level of physical activity.
End Quote Prof Carol PropperPhysical inactivity is the most important modifiable health behaviour for chronic disease"
Those with higher socioeconomic status were more physically active and people with a degree only had a 12% chance of being inactive. However, those with no qualifications were three times as likely to not exercise.
Those living in areas with more sports facilities and higher local authority spending on new facilities were also less likely to be inactive.
The study also found warm weather made people more likely to exercise, while rain reduced levels of physical activity.
Carol Propper, professor of economics at the university's Centre for Market and Public Organisation, said: "Physical inactivity is the most important modifiable health behaviour for chronic disease, so knowing who is physically inactive is important for designing cost-effective policy interventions."
She said the findings suggested that "financial as well as cultural barriers need to be overcome to reduce the prevalence of physical inactivity".
The NHS recommends people exercise at moderate intensity for at least two and a half hours every week. This can include cycling, fast walking, hiking and basketball. Experts also recommend muscle-strengthening activities on two or more days a week to work major muscle groups (legs, hips, back, abdomen, chest, shoulders and arms).
Olympic legacyTam Fry, spokesman for the National Obesity Forum and honorary chairman of the Child Growth Foundation, said: "No-one should be at all surprised by these woeful statistics."
He blamed successive governments for failing to ensure that the London 2012 Olympics inspired people to participate in grassroots sport.
The Economic and Social Research Council-funded research analysed data from Sport England's annual Active People Surveys, which included details on an individual's gender, education, income and local area deprivation, physical activity levels and local geographical factors such as weather and access to sports facilities and green spaces.
The World Health Organisation estimates physical inactivity causes 1.9 million deaths a year worldwide, including 10% to 16% of breast cancer, colon cases and diabetes cases and about 22% of coronary heart disease cases.
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