How walking in Hong Kong is helping with cancer recovery and mental health
For cancer survivors, walking is one of the most accessible and sustainable forms of rehabilitation we learn on World Cancer Day

In a city obsessed with efficiency, optimisation and results, walking has rarely been focused on as a health intervention. Yet across Hong Kong, a quiet reframing is taking place. Increasingly, it is being described not as light exercise or leisure, but as a form of everyday medicine, one that supports mental health, recovery from illness and ageing well, without injury or pressure.
“People often overextend themselves trying to do too much, too soon, especially in fast-paced cities,” she says. “Walking allows you to show up consistently over long periods of time without injury or burnout.”
This gentle shift is increasingly backed by research emerging from Hong Kong and mainland China, which suggests that walking, particularly when done regularly and in nature, may offer psychological and physical benefits that more intense exercise does not always deliver.
