Accelerometer-Measured Sedentary and Physical Activity Time and Their Correlates in European Older Adults : The SITLESS Study

Author

Giné-Garriga, Maria

Sansano-Nadal, Oriol

Tully, Mark A.

Caserotti, Paolo

Coll-Planas, Laura

Rothenbacher, Dietrich

Dallmeier, Dhayana

Denkinger, Michael

Wilson, Jason J.

Martin-Borràs, Carme

Skjødt, Mathias

Ferri, Kelly

Farche, Ana Claudia

McIntosh, Emma

Blackburn, Nicole E..

Salvà Casanovas, Antoni

Roqué i Figuls, Marta

Publication date

2020

Abstract

Sedentary behavior (SB) and physical activity (PA) are important determinants of health in older adults. This study aimed to describe the composition of accelerometer-measured SB and PA in older adults, to explore self-reported context-specific SB, and to assess sociodemographic and functional correlates of engaging in higher levels of SB in participants of a multicenter study including four European countries. One thousand three hundred and sixty community-dwelling older adults from the SITLESS study (61.8% women; 75.3 ± 6.3 years) completed a self-reported SB questionnaire and wore an ActiGraph accelerometer for 7 days. Accelerometer-determined compositional descriptive statistics were calculated. A fixed-effects regression analysis was conducted to assess the sociodemographic (country, age, sex, civil status, education, and medications) and functional (body mass index and gait speed) correlates. Older adults spent 78.8% of waking time in SB, 18.6% in light-intensity PA, and 2.6% in moderate-to-vigorous PA. Accelerometry showed that women engaged in more light-intensity PA and walking and men engaged in higher amounts of moderate-to-vigorous PA. Watching television and reading accounted for 47.2% of waking time. Older age, being a man, single, taking more medications, being obese and overweight, and having a slower gait speed were statistically significant correlates of more sedentary time. The high amount of SB of our participants justifies the need to develop and evaluate interventions to reduce sitting time. A clinically relevant change in gait speed can decrease almost 0.45 percentage points of sedentary time. The distribution of context-specific sedentary activities by country and sex showed minor differences, albeit worth noting.

Document Type

Article

Language

English

Subjects and keywords

Compositional analysis; Sedentary behavior; Physical activity; Sociodemographic correlates

Publisher

 

Related items

European Commission 634270

The journals of gerontology ; Vol. 75 (january 2020), p. 1754-1762

Rights

open access

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