Patterns of sedentary behavior in overweight and moderately obese users of the Catalan primary-health care system
View/Open
Author
Other authors
Publication date
2018-01Abstract
Background and objectives
Prolonged sitting time (ST) has negative consequences on health. Changing this behavior is
paramount in overweight/obese individuals because they are more sedentary than those
with normal weight. The aim of the study was to establish the pattern of sedentary behavior
and its relationship to health, socio-demographics, occupation, and education level in Catalan
overweight/obese individuals.
Methods
A descriptive study was performed at 25 healthcare centers in Catalonia (Spain) with 464
overweight/moderately obese patients, aged25 to 65 years. Exclusion criteria were chronic
diseases which contraindicated physical activity and language barriers. Face-to-face interviews
were conducted to collect data on age, gender, educational level, social class, and
marital status. Main outcome was ‘sitting time’ (collected by the Marshall questionnaire);
chronic diseases and anthropometric measurements were registered.
Results
464 patients, 58.4% women, mean age 51.9 years (SD 10.1), 76.1% married, 60% manual
workers, and 48.7% had finished secondary education. Daily sitting time was 6.2 hours on
working days (374 minutes/day, SD: 190), and about 6 hours on non-working ones (357
minutes/day, SD: 170). 50% of participants were sedentary 6 hours. The most frequent
sedentary activities were: working/academic activities around 2 hours (128 minutes, SD:
183), followed by watching television, computer use, and commuting. Men sat longer than
women (64 minutes more on working days and 54 minutes on non-working days), and individuals
with office jobs (91 minutes),those with higher levels of education (42 minutes), and
younger subjects (25 to 35 years) spent more time sitting.
Conclusions
In our study performed in overweight/moderately obese patients the mean sitting time was
around 6 hours which was mainly spent doing work/academic activities and watching television.
Men, office workers, individuals with higher education, and younger subjects had longer
sitting time. Our results may help design interventions targeted at these sedentary
patients to decrease sitting time.
Document Type
Article
Published version
Language
English
Keywords
Sedentarisme
Salut
Obesitat
Atenció primària
Pages
15 p.
Publisher
PLOS (Public Library of Science)
Is part of
Plos One, 2018, Núm. 13(1)
This item appears in the following Collection(s)
Rights
(c)2018 Martínez-Ramos et al.
Except where otherwise noted, this item's license is described as http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/