Good news for stay-at-home moms

In a study funded in part by the charity Cancer Research UK, 218,169 women from nine European countries were followed for an average of a little over six years to track the benefits of different kinds of exercise in preventing breast cancer.

Pre-menopausal women who did housework were found to be about 30% less likely to develop the disease than post-menopausal women who did none.

Meanwhile, post-menopausal women who did housework were found to be about 20 per cent less likely to develop the disease than post-menopausal women who did none.

Actually, all exercise has been linked to lower rates of breast cancer in women, but it seems that housework shows the greatest benefit. And, while other activities reduced the risk in post-menopausal women, only housework significantly reduced the risk for pre-menopausal women.

As with all studies, this raises as many questions for me as it does answers. Is there something specific about housework which brings about these results? Or is it that daily, light exercise is preferable to the two to three times per week rigorous exercise routines recommended by experts to “keep in shape?” Or, is the cause something else entirely? Perhaps there is something else about the lifestyles of women who do housework that leads to these results.

At any rate, next time one of your young ones runs through the house with muddy shoes moments after mopping, thank him for your health and the years he has added to your life. And if your children are so helpful that you worry you aren’t doing enough housework, Combs has kindly offered his home in the interest of preventing breast cancer. He won’t even charge for his preventive therapy.

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2 Comments

  1. Judy Aron, January 3, 2007:

    Yes - but I wonder what kinds of cancers and illnesses one acquires from breathing in all the toxic chemical fumes (like Chlorine from Chlorox)from all of the new fangled chemical cleaners that we put in and around our house. Certain floor cleaners have been known to give liver disease to our pets, and heaven knows what toll it takes on young kids.
    It’s good to clean, but we ought to be careful what cleaning methods we use.

  2. Dana, January 3, 2007:

    Hmmm…maybe it is the inhalation of these chemicals which is providing the beneficial results. Wouldn’t that be interesting?

    Seriously, though, if the people I knew were at all indicative of the norm in Europe, they seem to prefer good old soap and water mixed with frequency for most cleaning rather than all these chemicals designed to do all your scrubbing for you.

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