| Literature DB >> 31039760 |
Bartlomiej Stanczykiewicz1, Anna Banik2, Nina Knoll3, Jan Keller3, Diana Hilda Hohl3, Joanna Rosińczuk4, Aleksandra Luszczynska5,6.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Although the number of studies examining the relationships between sedentary behaviors (SB) and anxiety is growing, an overarching evidence, taking into account children, adolescents, and adults as well as different types of SB and different categories of anxiety outcomes, is still missing. Thus, this systematic review and meta-analysis aimed at obtaining a comprehensive overview of existing evidence.Entities:
Keywords: Adolescents; Adults; Anxiety; Children; Meta-analysis; Sedentary behaviors; Systematic review
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31039760 PMCID: PMC6492316 DOI: 10.1186/s12889-019-6715-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Public Health ISSN: 1471-2458 Impact factor: 3.295
Fig. 1Flow-chart for search strategy
Characteristics of analyzed original studies
| Study | Country | Study design | Population | N (% of females) | Mean age (SD) | SB measure/indicator | Anxiety measure | Positive, negative or non-significant elation-ship between anxiety and the type of SB | Main effects/findings | Quality score (%) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Asfour et al., 2016 [ | USA | Cross-sectional | Adolescents; (general population) | 575 (45%) | 13.8 ± 0.64 years | Time spent engaging in SB was calculated using five questions that inquired about time spent watching TV, playing video games, text messaging, Internet use and time spent on the telephone | Internalizing symptoms subscale of 112-item The Youth Self-Report [ | 0 for ST | Increased SB were associated with higher levels of externalizing symptoms ( | 98 |
| Asztalos et al., 2015 [ | Belgium | Cross-sectional | Adults (general population) | 4344 (52%) | 43.55 ± 11.05 years | Self-report - International Physical Activity Questionnaire (IPAQ) [ | 10-items for anxiety symptoms of Symptom Check List (SCL)(e.g. [ | + for sitting time | Sitting were positively associated with anxiety both in model adjusted for demographic (gender, age, education) ( | 95 |
| Bampton et al., 2015 [ | Canada | Cross-sectional | Older adults (≥ 55 yr) (general population) | 358 (66%) | 66.5 ± 8.0 years | Total and Domain Specific Measure of Sitting [ | Generalized Anxiety Disorder scale (GAD-2) [ | + for sitting time (+ for high sedentary time/low resistance group) | Low sedentary time/high RT group reported lower anxiety symptoms compared to high sedentary time/low RT group (Mdiff = − 0.67, | 81 |
| Cao et al., 2011 [ | China | Cross-sectional | Adolescents (general population) | 5003 (48%) | 13.13 ± 0.97 years | Self-report to an open-ended question: how many hours per day, on average, the participants spent on the sedentary activities outside school hours on a usual weekday, as well as a weekend day (TV viewing, computer usage) [ | 41-item Screen for Child Anxiety Related Emotional Disorders (SCARED) [ | + for ST | High screen time (> 2 h/day) was a risk factor for anxiety symptoms both in crude model ( | 95 |
| de Wit et al., 2011 [ | Netherlands | Cross-sectional | Adults (general population) | 2353 (65.45%) | 41.2 ± 13.0 years | Self-report - the daily number of hours a person spent on watching TV or computer use in leisure time | Composite International Diagnostic Interview (CIDI, WHO ver. 2.1) [ | + for TV viewing; 0 for computer use | Anxiety was related to spending more time watching TV ( | 82 |
| de Wit et al., 2015 [ | Netherlands, Austria, Belgium, Ireland, Italy, Poland, Spain, UK, Denmark | Cross-sectional | Adult pregnant women (general population) | 98 (100%) | 31.6 ± 5.8 years | Actigraph GT3X, GT1M or Actitrainer accelerometer [activity were calculated as time spent sedentary (< 100 cpm)] | Pregnancy-related worries were measured with the 13-item Cambridge Worry Scale (CWS) [ | 0 for ASB | Pregnancy-related worries were not significantly associated with sedentary behaviors | 100 |
| Dillon et al., 2018 [ | Ireland | Cross-sectional | Adults (general population) | 397 (54%) | 59.6 ± 5.5 | A triaxial, GENEActiv accelerometer (ActivInsights Ltd., Kimbolton, Cambridgeshire, UK) | Anxiety subscale of the 14-item Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale [ | + for ASB | Participants with moderate to severe anxiety symptoms had significantly more minutes of SB daily than those with low levels/ no symptoms of anxiety ( | 100 |
| Edwards & Loprinzi, 2016 [ | USA | RCT | Adults (general population) | 39 (59%) | Control: 22.08 ± 2.75; Intervention: 21.69 ± 2.71 | GT9X accelerometers [ | Overall Anxiety Severity and Impairment Scale (OASIS) [ | + for ASB | A statistically significant time x group interaction effect for OASIS scores | 89 |
| Feng et al., 2014 [ | China | Cross-sectional | Young adults (general population) | 1106 (43%) | 18.90 ± 0.9 years | Self-report ST measured with one item: ‘How many hours per day do you spend on computer, including internet use, watching TV/video programs and playing games on a usual weekday and weekend day, respectively?’ The ST was categorized as ≤2 h/d and > 2 h/d | Self-rating anxiety scale (SAS) [ | 0 for ST | No statistically significant associations were found between ST and anxiety both for ≤2 h/day ( | 93 |
| Gaskin et al., 2016 [ | Australia | Cross-sectional | Prostate cancer survivors (chronic illness) | 98 with complete data; 49 with no complete data | 67.3 ± 8.0 with complete data; 62.1 ± 8.6 with no complete data | Hip-mounted ActiGraph GT1 M accelerometer (Pensacola, FL) units | Memorial Anxiety Scale for Prostate Cancer (MAX-PC) – three subcales (prostate cancer anxiety, prostate-specific antigen anxiety, fear of recurrence) and a total anxiety scale [ | 0 for ASB | Prostate cancer anxiety ( | 91 |
| Gibson et al., 2017 [ | United Kingdom | Cross-sectional | Adults (general population) | 42 (55%) | 38.0 ± 11.5 | ActivPAL mini, an inclinometer-based activity monitor | Anxiety subscale of The 14-item Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale [ | + for ASB + for sitting time | Those with < 8 h of SB per day on weekdays had significantly lower levels of anxiety compared with those who were sitting > 8 h or > 10 h per day. The main effect for weekday sitting time on anxiety ( | 77 |
| Gunnell et al., 2016 [ | Canada | Longitudinal | Adolescents (general population) | 1160 (61%) - Time 1 | 13.54 ± 1.12 years | Self-report questionnaire - 6-items querying how many hours per day subjects typically engaged in TV viewing/video game playing/computer use). The first 3 items assess ST during weekdays and the last 3 items inquired about weekend days | 10-items Multidimensional Anxiety Scale for Children-10 (MASC-10) [ | 0 for ST | Initial symptoms of anxiety and ST did not predict change in ST and anxiety, respectively | 95 |
| Hiles et al., 2017 [ | Netherlands | Longitudinal | Adults (general population) | 2932 (66%) at baseline | 41.9 ± 13.1 | Self-report single question – sedentary behavior as an average hours of sitting on a weekday. | 21-item Beck Anxiety Inventory (BAI; [ | 0 for anxiety- > sitting time change | Anxiety at the baseline did not predict SB at a 2-year follow up ( | 100 |
| Janney et al., 2013 [ | USA | RCT | Adults with a diagnosis of schizophrenia/schizoaffective disorder with BMI > 27 (chronic illness) | 46 (63%) | 45.6 ± 9.8 years | ActiGraph AM-7164 accelerometer (ActiGraph, Ft. Walton Beach, FL). Sedentary was established as ≤100 cpm | PANSS (one item for anxiety) [ | 0 for ASB | No association was observed between SB and PANSS psychiatric symptoms (PANSS or subscale: | 89 |
| Kovess-Mastefy et al., 2015 [ | German, Netherlands, Lithuania, Romania, Bulgaria, Turkey | Cross-sectional | Schoolchildren (general population) | 3184 | 8.72 years | Parents were asked how long their child spends playing video games on average during the week. Low video game use was defined as 0–60 min per week; moderate use was defined as 61–300 min, and high use was > 300 min. | GAD indexes of self-reported mental health computerized cartoon-like assessment tool ‘Dominic Interactive’ for children [ | 0 for video game playing | Playing video games (1–5, and 5+ vs. 1 or less h) was not associated with GAD ( | 91 |
| Kroeders et al., 2013 [ | Australia | Cross-sectional | Stroke patients (chronic illness) | 19 (53%) | 66.2 ± 19.3 years | PAL2 electronic device - dual axis accelerometer | Anxiety subscale from Irritability, Depression and Anxiety (IDA) scale [ | - for sitting time | Patients with anxiety symptoms compared with those without symptoms tended to spend more time lying (mean 64% vs. 43%), less time sitting (mean 33% vs. 51%), and less time standing or walking (mean 2% vs. 6%). The difference between these groups in time spent lying bordered on significance ( | 76 |
| Liu et al., 2016 [ | China | Cross-sectional | Secondary school pupils/adolescents (general population) | 13,659 (49%) | 15.18 ± 1.89 years | The Youth Risk Behavior Survey (YRBS) questionnaire [ | The Multidimensional Anxiety Scale for Children (MASC) [ | + for TV viewing; + for VG/CU time | More than 2 h per school day of TV watching was associated with higher risk of anxiety in boys ( | 98 |
| Maras et al., 2015 [ | Canada | Cross-sectional | Adolescents (general population) | 2482 (58%) | 14.10 ± 1.57 years | The Leisure-Time Sedentary Activities 6-item questionnaire measured how many hours per day subjects typically engage in: TV viewing/video game playing, computer use). The first 3 items assess screen-based activities during a typical weekday and the last 3 items screen time accrued on a typical weekend day. | The Multidimensional Anxiety Scale for Children-10 (MASC-10) | + for ST (hours per day of TV viewing; recreational computer use; video games); + for video game playing; 0 for TV viewing; 0 for computer | Duration of screen time ( | 93 |
| Mesquita et al., 2017 [ | Netherlands | Prospective observational study | Adults with COPD before/after pulmonary rehabilitation (chronic illness) | 90 (40%) | 67.0 ± 8.0 | CIRO activity monitor (CAM or the MOX Activity Monitor (Maastricht Instruments B.V in Maastricht, the Netherlands) | Anxiety subscale of the 14-item Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale [ | 0 for anxiety- > ASB change | Baseline anxiety levels were unrelated to changes in minutes of SB (pre-post rehabilitation, Spearman | 95 |
| Opdenacker, & Boen, 2008 [ | Belgium | Longitudinal | Adults (general population) | 66 | 2 groups, aged | Self-report - International Physical Activity Questionnaire (IPAQ) [ | The Spielberger state-trait anxiety inventory (STAI) [ | 0 for sitting time | Sitting time was not associated with anxiety ( | 85 |
| Padmapriya et al., 2016 [ | Singapore | Cross-sectional | Pregnant women (general population) | 257 with state anxiety symptoms; 270 with trait anxiety symptoms | 29.5 ± 5.7 with state anxiety symptoms; 29.5 ± 5.6 with trait anxiety symptoms | Two categories of self-reported total sitting time per day and TV viewing time per day: < 7 h of total sitting time per day and < 2 h of TV viewing time per day were identified as lower tertiles; ≥7 h of total sitting per day and ≥ 2 h of TV viewing time per day were defined as higher total sitting time and TV time | The Spielberger state-trait anxiety inventory (STAI) | + for TV viewing | Women with higher TV viewing time had higher state anxiety compared to women with lower TV viewing time in crude analysis ( | 95 |
| Park et al., 2017 [ | United Kingdom | Cross-sectional | Older adults (residents from assisted living facilities), (chronic illness) | 87 | 77.5 ± 8.2 | Accelerometers (GT3X+, WGT3X-BT; ActiGraph (Pensacola, FL, USA) | Anxiety subscale of the 14-item Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale [ | - for ASB | SB was negatively associated with anxiety ( | 95 |
| Rebar et al., 2014 [ | Australia | Cross-sectional | Adults (general population) | 1104 (55%) | 58 (range 48–66) | 10-item Workforce Sitting Questionnaire [ | Anxiety subscale from 21-item Depression, Anxiety, and Stress Scale (DASS-21) [ | + for overall sitting time + for computer sitting 0 for leisure/work/TV sitting | Overall sitting time ( | 100 |
| Sanchez-Villegas et al., 2008 [ | Spain, USA | Longitudinal | Adults (general population) | 10,381 | 27 years | Self-report sedentary index: hours per week spent on watching television and/or using computer. | Self-reported anxiety: ‘Have you ever been diagnosed of anxiety by a health professional?’ - classified as an incident case of anxiety | 0 for ST | There was no significant association between the sedentary index and anxiety risk ( | 89 |
| Straker et al., 2013 [ | Australia | Longitudinal | Adolescents (general population) | 643 (54%) | 14.0 ± 0.2 years | Screen Based Media – Self-report recall electronic diary/questionnaire MARCA - clusters: C1. instrumental computer gamers; C2. multi-modal e-gamers; C3. computer e-gamers [ | Internalizing symptoms index of 112-item the Youth Self-Report [ | + for game playing | C1 males reported less internalizing behavioral problems than C2 (difference − 1.7, 95% CI: [− 3.5, 0.1], | 91 |
| Teychenne & Hinkley, 2016 [ | Australia | Cross-sectional | Adult women with children aged 2–5 years (general population) | 575 (100%) | 37.18 ± 4.62 years | Self-report –of women’s own activities, including time spent on TV/DVD/video viewing, computer/e-games/hand held device use on a typical weekday and weekend day | 7-items related to symptoms of anxiety experienced in the past week: a subscale (HADS-A) of the Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale (HADS) [ | + for computer /device use + for total ST; 0 for TV viewing | TV viewing was not associated with anxiety symptoms ( | 100 |
| Uijtdewilligen et al., 2011 [ | Netherlands | Longitudinal | Adolescents (general population) | 217 (58%) | M: 13.0 ± 0.6 years; F: 12.9 ± 0.6 years | Acti-Graph accelerometers (Model GT1M, ActiGraph, LLC, Fort Walton Beach, FL) | Facilitating anxiety index of Achievement Motivation Test (AMT) [ | + for ASB | In males, a higher score on facilitating anxiety ( | 88 |
| Vallance et al., 2015 [ | Canada; Australia | Cross-sectional | Adults (general population) | 197 (overall 180–45%) | 64.3 ± 10.3 | Acitgraph GT3X+ accelerometer (Actigraph, LLC, Pensacola, FL) | Spielberger’s State Anxiety Inventory (STAI) - 10 items | 0 for ASB | No significant associations emerged for sedentary time and psychological health outcomes (including anxiety) [Wilks’ λ = 0.956, | 93 |
| van Roekel et al., 2016 [ | Netherlands | Cross-sectional | Adults treated for stage I–III colorectal cancer (chronic illness) | 145 (37.2%) | 70.0 ± 8.7 years | The triaxial MOX activity monitor (MMOXX1, upgraded version of the CAM monitor) | Anxiety subscale of the 14-item Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale [ | 0 for ASB (0 for sedentary per 1 h/day) | Substituting sedentary time with physical activity was not significantly associated with lower anxiety ( | 95 |
| Vancampfort et al., 2018 [ | China, Ghana, India, Mexico, Russia, South Africa | Cross-sectional | Adults (general population) | 42,469 (50.1%) | 43.8 ± 14.4 | Self-report sitting time – total time usually spent (expressed in minutes per day) sitting or reclining including at work, at home, getting to and from places, or with friends (e.g., sitting at a desk, sitting with friends, travelling in car, bus, train, reading, playing cards or watching television) | Self-reported anxiety by the question ‘Overall in the past 30 days, how much of a problem did you have with worry or anxiety’ with response alternatives: none, mild, moderate, severe, extreme. Those who answered severe or extreme were considered to have anxiety | + for sitting time | Anxiety was significantly associated with higher mean time spent sitting ( | 100 |
| Wu et al., 2015 [ | China | Cross-sectional | Adults (general population) | 4747 (58.4%) - 16.3% with anxiety | 19.2 ± 1.41 years | Self-report screen time measured with one item: ‘How many hours per day do you spend on the computer (including playing video or computer games or computer for something) and watching TV/video programs on a usual weekday and weekend day, respectively?’ ST was categorized as ≤2 h/d and > 2 h/d | Self-rating anxiety scale (SAS) [ | + for ST | High screen time > 2 h/day ( | 98 |
ASB accelerometry measured sedentary behaviors, SB sedentary behaviors (three article which provided broad definition of obtained sedentary behaviors index), ST total screen time, MVPA moderate-to-vigorous physical activity, RT resistance training, VG video games, CU computer use, GAD generalized anxiety disorder
astudies included into meta-analysis
Fig. 2The funnel plot of standard errors by Fisher’s z
Associations between SB and anxiety symptoms among children/adolescents and adults
| Sample/Category of SB | Accelerometry measured sedentary behaviors) | Total sitting time | Total screen time | TV viewing | Computer use/internet use/video game playing | Proportion of significant positive associations across studies (regardless of the category of SB) | Proportion of significant positive associations: Adults vs. children/adolescents (regardless of the category of SB) | Proportion of significant positive associations: general population vs. with chronic illness (regardless of the category of SB) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Adults | ||||||||
| General population | + (Edwards & Loprinzi, 2016; Gibson et al. 2017; Dillon et al., 2018) [ | + (Asztalos et al., 2015; Bampton et al., 2015; Rebar et al., 2014; Gibson et al., 2017; Vancampfort et al., 2018) [ | + (Teychenne & Hinkley, 2016; Wu et al., 2015) [ | + (de Wit et al., 2011; Padmapriya et al., 2016) [ | + (Rebar et al., 2014; Teychenne & Hinkley, 2016) [ | Adults; general population: 14 (61%) in 23 associations | Total adults: 14 (48%) in 29 associations | Total for general population (children/adolescents vs. adults) 21 (60%) in 35 associations |
| With a chronic mental or physical illness | 0 (van Roekel et al., 2016; Janney et al., 2013; Mesquita et al., 2017; Gaskin et al., 2016) [ | - (Kroeders et al., 2013) [ | ||||||
| Children and adolescents (aged < 18) | ||||||||
| General population | + (Uijtdewilligen et al., 2011) [ | + (Cao et al., 2011; Maras et al., 2015) [ | + (Liu et al., 2016) [ | + (Straker et al., 2013; Maras et al., 2015; Liu et al., 2016) [ | Children/Adolescents; general population: 7 (58%) in 12 associations | Total children/adolescents: 7 (58%) in 12 associations | ||
| With a chronic mental or physical illness | ||||||||
| Proportion of significant positive associations across studies (regardless age/ health status) | 4 (36%) of 11 associations | 6 (67%) of 9 associations | 4 (50%) in 8 associations | 3 (50%) of 6 associations | 5 (63%) in 8 associations | 21 (51%) in 41 associations | ||
+a significant positive association between sedentary behavior and anxiety symptoms
0not significant association between sedentary behavior and anxiety symptoms
-a significant negative association between sedentary behavior and anxiety
Results of meta-analysis and moderation analysis of the association between SB and anxiety symptoms
| Estimate of the average effect | Range of correlation coefficients retrieved from original studies | 95% CI for the estimate of the average effect |
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| Heterogeneity | Test for moderating effects | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
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| Overall effect | .093 | .01; .46 | [.05; .13] | 26,204b | 17 | 77.04 | 79.23 | .06 | .003 | ||
| Moderators effects for overall effect and levels of respective moderators | |||||||||||
| Age group | 2.97 | .085 | |||||||||
| Children/adolescents | .05 | .01; .17 | [−.01; .11] | 17,873 | 5 | ||||||
| Adults (over 18) | .12 | .02; .46 | [.06; .17] | 7868 | 7 | ||||||
| Health status | 0.05 | .820 | |||||||||
| Adults with a chronic physical or mental illness | .16 | .03; .39 | [.03; .30] | 463 | 5 | ||||||
| Adults from the general population | .15 | .02; .46 | [.05; .23] | 6990 | 6 | ||||||
| The type of measurement of sedentary behaviors | 1.08 | .299 | |||||||||
| Objective | .14 | .03; .39 | [.04; .24] | 505 | 6 | ||||||
| Self-report | .08 | .01; .46 | [.04; .12] | 25,699 | 11 | ||||||
| The type of SB | 2.21 | .137 | |||||||||
| Total sitting time | .12 | .02; .46 | [.06; .19] | 7298 | 5 | ||||||
| Total screen time | .06 | .01; .17 | [.00; 11] | 18,401 | 6 | ||||||
| The sub-type of screen use-related behaviors | 5.04a | .080 | |||||||||
| Computer using |
| .10; .14 | [.05; .18] | 2183 | 2 | ||||||
| Computer/video games playing |
| .02; .03 | [−.03; .08] | 15,896 | 2 | ||||||
| TV viewing | .05 | −.001; .10 | [.01; .09] | 16,475 | 4 | ||||||
Note. a - Two-group comparisons revealed that effect sizes marked with bold were significantly different
b - data from 26,204 participants were included from the total of 27,443 who were enrolled across 17 studies. The difference between the number of participants in analyses vs. the original study samples occurred as in cases the coefficients provided by authors in response to our inquiry were based on a smaller N than N reported in the publication