| Literature DB >> 35850665 |
Meng Ding1, Yanan Zhou1, Chengxiang Li1, Weipeng Li1, Ningxin Jia1, Xiaosheng Dong2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: At present, there is a lack of direct evidence to confirm whether the recommendations of the World Health Organization can play a role in fitness and disease prevention in the Chinese population. Therefore, we aimed to analyse 7-year longitudinal survey data to explore whether the physical activity volume recommended by the World Health Organization can help Chinese middle-aged and elderly people reduce the risk of heart disease.Entities:
Keywords: Heart disease; Longitudinal survey; WHO’s recommendations of physical activity
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35850665 PMCID: PMC9290295 DOI: 10.1186/s12877-022-03276-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Geriatr ISSN: 1471-2318 Impact factor: 4.070
Assessment of Physical Activity
| Intensity | Low-intensity physical activity (LPA) | Moderate-intensity physical activity (MPA) | High-intensity | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Walking, leisure, sports, and so on | Carrying light loads, cycling at normal speed, mopping the floor, doing Taijiquan, fast walking, etc. | Carrying heavy objects, digging, farming, aerobics, fast cycling, etc. | |||||
| 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | |
| <10 mins | ≥10 mins, <30 mins | ≥30 mins, <2 hours | ≥2 hours, <4 hours | ≥4 hours | |||
Baseline characteristics
| Characteristics | Insufficient PA | PA meeting the WHO’s recommendations ( | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Age (years): | |||
| 45–64(4365) | 1531(43.2) | 2834(60.3) | |
| ≥ 65(3872) | 2010(56.8) | 1862(39.7) | |
| Sex: | |||
| Women (4443) | 1634(46.1) | 2160(46.0) | |
| Man(3794) | 1907(53.9) | 2536(54.0) | |
| BMI: | |||
| <18.5(514) | 271(7.7) | 243(5.2) | |
| 18. ≤ and<25(5274) | 2216(62.6) | 3058(65.1) | |
| 25 ≤ and < 30(2093) | 880(24.9) | 1213(25.8) | |
| ≥ 30(356) | 174(4.9) | 182(3.9) | |
| Education: | |||
| ≤ Highschool(7917) | 3381(95.5) | 4536(96.6) | |
| ≥ College(320) | 160(4.5) | 160(3.4) | |
| Drinking status: | |||
| Current(2124) | 861(24.3) | 1263(26.9) | |
| Former(694) | 273(7.7) | 421(9.0) | |
| Never(5419) | 2407(68.0) | 3012(64.1) | |
| Smoking status: | |||
| Current(2562) | 1116(31.5) | 1446(30.8) | |
| Former(594) | 271(7.7) | 323(6.9) | |
| Never(5081) | 2154(60.8) | 2927(62.3) | |
| Other chronic conditions: | |||
| Hypertension: | |||
| Untreated(395) | 170(4.8) | 225(4.8) | |
| Treated(1074) | 562(15.9) | 512(10.9) | |
| None(6768) | 2809(79.3) | 3959(84.3) | |
| Hyperlipidaemia: | |||
| Untreated(257) | 115(3.2) | 142(3.0) | |
| Treated(273) | 150(4.2) | 123(2.6) | |
| None(7707) | 3276(92.5) | 4431(94.4) | |
| Diabetes: | |||
| Untreated(109) | 50(1.4) | 59(1.3) | |
| Treated(216) | 133(3.8) | 83(1.8) | |
| None(7912) | 3358(94.8) | 4554(97.0) | |
| Lung disease: | |||
| Untreated(275) | 130(3.7) | 145(3.1) | |
| Treated(338) | 161(4.5) | 177(3.8) | |
| None(7624) | 3250(91.8) | 4374(93.1) | |
Fig. 1Distribution of participants with different physical activity levels, purposes, and ages. Part A: Distribution of participants with different physical activity levels and ages: Insufficient PAV: the physical activity volume does not meet the WHO’s recommendations; PAVMW: the physical activity volume meets the WHO’s recommendations. Part B: Distribution of participants meeting the WHO’s recommendations with different physical activity purposes and ages; JDs: job demands; EE: entertainment or exercise; JDs&EE: job demands and entertainment or exercise
Association between study participants engaging in physical activities according to the WHO physical activity recommendations and heart disease morbidity
| Variables | Model 1 | Model 2 | Model 3 |
|---|---|---|---|
| Insufficient PA | ref | ref | ref |
| PA meeting the WHO’s recommendations | 0.79(0.66–0.93) | 0.79(0.67–0.94) | 0.80(0.68–0.96) |
| For work | 0.75 (0.61–0.92)** | 0.77 (0.63–0.95)* | 0.79 (0.65–0.97)* |
| For leisure | 0.92 (0.73–1.16) | 0.90 (0.72–1.13) | 0.90(0.72–1.13) |
| For both work and leisure | 0.44 (0.25–0.79)** | 0.45 (0.25,0.81)** | 0.46 (0.26–0.83)* |
PA Physical activity, HD Heart disease. Values are hazard ratios (95% confidence intervals)
Model 1: Adjusted for sex and age
Model 2: Model 1 + education level, body mass index, smoking status, and drinking status
Model 3: Model 2 + chronic conditions
Fig. 2Subgroup analyses of the association between study participants engaging in physical activities according to the WHO physical activity recommendations and heart disease incidence rate. PMWR: PAV meeting the WHO’s recommendations