Accelerometer-Measured Sedentary and Physical Activity Time and Their Correlates in European Older Adults: The SITLESS Study
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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, Antoni
Roqué Fíguls, Marta
Other authors
Universitat Ramon Llull. Facultat de Psicologia, Ciències de l’Educació i de l’Esport Blanquerna
Publication date
2020Abstract
Background: 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.
Method: 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.
Results: 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.
Conclusions: 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
Accepted version
Language
English
Keywords
Persones grans
Sedentarisme
Activitat física
Pages
9 p.
Publisher
Oxford University Press on behalf of The Gerontological Society of America
Is part of
Journals of Gerontology: Series A, 14 gener 2020
Grant agreement number
info:eu-repo/grantAgreement/EU/H2020/Grant No. 634270
This item appears in the following Collection(s)
Rights
© L'autor/a
Except where otherwise noted, this item's license is described as http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/