A new study suggests that patients who walk more after surgery may recover faster and face fewer health complications during the healing process.
Researchers found that higher daily step counts after surgery were linked to lower risks of complications, reduced hospital readmissions, and shorter hospital stays across a wide range of surgical procedures.
The study analyzed data from nearly 2,000 adults who underwent inpatient surgeries. Findings showed that every additional 1,000 steps taken per day after surgery was associated with an 18 percent reduction in complications, a 16 percent lower risk of hospital readmission, and a 6 percent shorter hospital stay.
Researchers also discovered that step count was a stronger indicator of recovery than other commonly used measures, including heart rate variability and self-reported wellness scores.
Health experts say movement plays an important role in postoperative recovery by improving circulation, supporting lung function, reducing muscle weakness, and lowering the risk of blood clots.
The findings support growing medical efforts to encourage early movement after surgery as part of enhanced recovery programs designed to help patients heal more quickly and safely.
Researchers noted that wearable devices such as fitness trackers and smartwatches may provide healthcare providers with a practical way to monitor patient recovery in real time.
According to the study, a sudden drop in daily movement could also serve as an early warning sign of possible complications such as infection, dehydration, breathing problems, pain issues, or delayed healing.
Medical professionals believe wearable technology could help doctors identify recovery problems earlier and provide additional support before conditions worsen.
The research also emphasized that recovery goals should be personalized based on a patient’s age, health condition, and type of surgery rather than using a single step target for everyone.
Experts say patients are generally encouraged to begin light movement as soon as it is medically safe after surgery, gradually increasing activity levels during recovery.
Researchers added that more studies are still needed to determine whether increasing daily step counts directly improves recovery outcomes or mainly reflects that a patient is already healing well.
However, they say the findings strengthen evidence that physical activity remains an important part of postoperative care and long-term recovery.



