The VerdictHIGH CONVICTIONVerdict Score 82Worth-It: High ROI (85/100)

One fitness number predicts how long you live better than your weight or blood pressure.

Tonight, walk one mile and time it. That is your starting fitness number. Re-time it twelve weeks from now after two structured sessions a week. The change is what matters.

  1. The most surprising finding: people in the top fitness group have about half the death rate of people in the bottom group, across studies covering more than two million adults.
  2. What most people get wrong: blaming weight when fitness is the real lever. Fit overweight people have the same mortality risk as fit normal-weight people. Unfit people at any weight have two to three times the risk.
  3. What to actually do about it: aim for one-MET fitness gain in twelve weeks with two structured sessions per week, one easy and one hard.

Think of your body as a car engine. Weight is the size of the chassis. Blood pressure is the tire pressure. Cardiorespiratory fitness is how big the engine is and how fast it can move air through the cylinders. People with bigger engines outlive people with smaller engines, regardless of chassis size.

SH
Dr. Seth Holbrook, DPT — Doctor of Physical Therapy • Coach to 300+ clients
I built The Verdict to cut through recycled health advice and show what the evidence actually supports.

VO2 Max — The Strongest Longevity Predictor

One number predicts mortality better than weight, blood pressure, or smoking status. The good news is you can move it.

Conviction · HIGH

Tonight, walk one mile and time it. That is your starting fitness number.

Whether you can hit a faster time twelve weeks from now is the only longevity-relevant target you actually control.

Takes 15–20 minutes. No equipment beyond a phone timer.

One fitness number predicts how long you live better than your weight or blood pressure.

Think of your body as a car engine. Weight is the size of the chassis. Blood pressure is the tire pressure. Cardiorespiratory fitness is how big the engine is and how fast it can move air through the cylinders. People with bigger engines outlive people with smaller engines, regardless of chassis size.

  1. The number that changed my mind: People in the top fitness group have about half the death rate of people in the bottom group, across studies covering more than two million adults.
  2. The myth that won't die: Blaming weight when fitness is the real lever. Fit overweight people have the same mortality risk as fit normal-weight people. Unfit people at any weight have two to three times the risk.
  3. The one change that matters: Aim for a one-MET fitness gain in twelve weeks with two structured sessions per week, one easy and one hard.

Want the full evidence? Keep scrolling

The Practical Takeaway

  1. Get a baseline number, even a rough one

    A submaximal exercise test, a one-mile walk pace, or a non-exercise algorithm (age, sex, BMI, resting heart rate, activity level) all work. Without a baseline, you cannot tell whether training actually moved the needle.

  2. Train for a one-MET gain over 12 to 24 weeks

    Two structured sessions per week. One zone 2 session of at least 30 minutes at conversational pace. One intensity session, like four rounds of four minutes at near-maximal effort. Combining both beats either alone.

  3. Re-test every 6 to 12 months

    Trajectory matters more than absolute numbers. After age 30 the natural drift is about 1 percent per year without training and roughly half that with consistent training.

Practical training prescription for VO2 max gains

Conviction

Verdict graphic on VO2 max as longevity predictor
HIGH

The headline claim is anchored by two independent GRADE-assessed meta-analyses (Laukkanen 2022 and Lang 2024) and reproduced across decades of cohort evidence with consistent direction and magnitude. No reviewed meta-analysis showed a null or inverse association in healthy adults. The dose-response is preserved across age, sex, follow-up duration, measurement method, and clinical subgroups.

What would change my mind on the headline claim

A pre-registered, large-N (≥50,000) randomized trial in healthy adults assigning structured fitness-improvement training versus an active behavioral control for ≥10 years, measuring all-cause mortality, that failed to show a mortality reduction in compliant subjects who achieved a ≥1-MET fitness gain. Such a trial does not exist and is unlikely to be conducted for ethical and feasibility reasons.

What would change my mind on the upper-tail debate

A pooled analysis of cohorts with sufficient elite-fitness representation in the top stratum (N>20,000 with CRF ≥14 METs) using fine-grained CRF stratification rather than tertiles. The current debate about whether elite fitness keeps adding years or attenuates is genuinely unresolved by available data.

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Sources

  1. Laukkanen JA, Isiozor NM, Kunutsor SK, 2022, Mayo Clinic Proceedings. Updated meta-analysis, 37 cohort studies, N=2,258,029 with 108,613 deaths. Top vs bottom tertile RR 0.55 (95% CI 0.50–0.61). Per 1-MET RR 0.89. GRADE-assessed.
  2. Lang JJ et al., 2024, British Journal of Sports Medicine. GRADE-assessed overview of 26 systematic reviews, ≥20.9M observations, 199 unique cohorts. High vs low CRF: HR 0.47. Per 1-MET: 11–17% reduction in all-cause mortality.
  3. Han M et al., 2022, British Journal of Sports Medicine. Dose-response meta-analysis of 34 cohort studies. Per 1-MET: all-cause RR 0.88, CVD RR 0.87, cancer RR 0.93.
  4. Weeldreyer NR et al., 2025, British Journal of Sports Medicine. Three-level meta-analysis, N=398,716. Fit at any BMI ≈ fit normal-weight; unfit at any BMI 2–3× higher mortality.
  5. Singh B et al., 2025, Journal of Sport and Health Science. Meta-analysis of 42 studies, 3.8M observations. Estimated CRF performs comparably to lab-measured CRF for mortality prediction.
  6. Kodama S et al., 2009, JAMA. Landmark meta-analysis, 33 cohorts, N≈103k. Per 1-MET RR 0.87. Defined the ~12% per-MET shorthand.

Verdict Score

How strong is the evidence for the claims in this review? Higher = more confidence the claims are supported. This does not measure how large the effect is or how important it is compared with other levers.

82 Strong evidence
80–100Strong evidence ◀
60–79Mixed but supportive
40–59Uncertain
0–39Weak support

Action ROI

Is this worth your time, money, effort, risk, and trust for this goal? Different from Verdict Score (evidence strength) and Leverage Map (relative importance) — Action ROI is the worth-it call once friction is priced in.

Action ROI score
85/100 High ROI Trust grade B
Yes. Cardiorespiratory fitness is one of the strongest modifiable predictors of mortality risk, and structured training reliably moves the number.
Time
Medium
Money
Low
Effort
High
Risk
Low
Why this score
Why it didn’t score higher
Best for
Lower ROI if
Minimum effective dose
Two structured sessions per week for 12-24 weeks: (a) one zone 2 session of 30+ minutes at conversational pace, (b) one intensity session such as 4x4 minutes at near-maximal effort with ~3 minute recoveries. Establish a baseline first (submaximal test, 1-mile walk pace, or a non-exercise algorithm). Re-test every 6-12 months. Combined zone 2 plus intensity beats either alone.
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