| Literature DB >> 26285581 |
Anne-Sophie Brazeau1, Samantha Hajna2, Lawrence Joseph3, Kaberi Dasgupta4.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Studies suggest a relationship between sitting time and cardiovascular disease mortality. Our aim was to identify socio-demographic, contextual, and clinical (e.g., body composition, diabetes duration) correlates of self-reported sitting time among adults with type 2 diabetes, a clinical population at high risk for cardiovascular disease. We sought to determine if there was an inverse relationship between sitting and step counts in a diabetes cohort in whom we had previously identified low step counts with further lowering in fall/winter.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26285581 PMCID: PMC4541749 DOI: 10.1186/s12889-015-2086-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Public Health ISSN: 1471-2458 Impact factor: 3.295
Univariate longitudinal hierarchical linear regression estimates between the predictors of interest and daily sitting time in minutes
| Baseline characteristics | Increment in minutes of daily sitting time (95 % CrI)b | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Average daily sitting time (minutes); |
| 308 (161) | --- |
|
| 278 (188, 405) | --- | |
| Socio-demographic factors | |||
| Men; | 106 (54 %) | −2.9 (−4.9, −0.8) | |
| Age (years); | 60.0 (10.5) | 41.3 (−3.5, 85.7) | |
| University education; | 78 (39 %) | 58.2 (12.3, 103.6) | |
| Currently employed; | 113 (57 %) | 86.3 (42.5, 130.0) | |
| Annual household income ≥ $50,000; | 77 (44 %) | 90.0 (43.3, 134.9) | |
| Married/common-law; | 123 (69 %) | −34.9 (−86.3, 15.4) | |
| Immigrant; | 91 (46 %) | −53.3 (−98.2, −10.1) | |
| Contextual factors | |||
| Dog ownership; | 31 (16 %) | 18.2 (−40.9, 78.3) | |
| Regular vehicle access; | 70 (80 %) | 92.0 (6.7, 179.2) | |
| Steps (steps/day); | 5361 (2473) | 0.001 (−0.005, 0.008) | |
| Clinical factors | |||
| Body mass index (kg/m2); | 30.4 (5.6) | 1.3 (−2.8, 5.4) | |
| Waist circumference (cm); | 102.1 (13.2) | 2.4 (1.1, 3.6) | |
| Depressed mood; | 55 (28 %) | −36.5 (−71.5, −2.4) | |
| Diabetes duration (years); | 9.4 (8.0) | −2.6 (−5.4, 0.2) | |
| Insulin use; | 66 (33 %) | --- | |
aAnnual household income (n = 177); married/common law (n = 178); regular vehicle access (n = 87); Daily steps (n = 129); Depressed mood (n = 137)
bModelling independent variables at baseline except for depression and steps/day which were modelled over time; sitting time was modelled over time
Fig. 1Self-reported sitting across seasons. Self-reported sitting: Fall, n = 154, Winter, n = 146; Spring, n = 150; Summer, n = 149. Data are mean values (black line) with 1 standard deviation (grey lines)
Fig. 2Behaviours’ change between seasons. Changes between seasons were available for 142 individuals. Data are mean with 95 % confidence intervals
Multivariate longitudinal hierarchical linear regression estimates between the predictors of interest and daily sitting time in minutes (n = 191)
| Increment in minutes of daily sitting time (95 % CrI) | |
|---|---|
| Sex (men) | 22.5 (−23.3, 68.3) |
| Age, per year | −2.4 (−5.0, 0.0) |
| Currently working | 42.9 (−9.1, 93.4) |
| University education | 54.8 (10.0, 100.3) |
| Immigrant | −55.7 (−99.9, −11.3) |
| Waist circumference, per cm | 1.1 (−0.7, 2.9) |
| Absence of depressed mood | −11.1 (−61.2, 38.6) |
| Daily steps, per step | −0.001 (−0.011, 0.008) |