| Literature DB >> 36180761 |
David Mizrahi1,2, Christopher T V Swain3, Fiona Bruinsma3, Allison Hodge3,4, Natalie Taylor5, Brigid M Lynch6,7,8.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: There is increasing evidence for the relationship between physical activity (PA), sedentary behaviour and mental health. Limited data exists on sex-specific associations. We aimed to identify associations between PA dose and domain and television time with psychological distress, including sex-stratified models.Entities:
Keywords: Exercise; Mental health; Physical activity; Psychological distress; Sedentary
Year: 2022 PMID: 36180761 PMCID: PMC9524734 DOI: 10.1007/s12529-022-10130-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Behav Med ISSN: 1070-5503
Fig. 1Recruitment flow chart
Participant descriptive characteristics
| Age, | 65.8 (8.7) |
|---|---|
| Sex, | |
| Female | 13,382 (60) |
| BMI, kg/m2, mean (SD) | 26.4 (4.2) |
| Country of birth, | |
| Australia/New Zealand | 17,138 (77) |
| Northern Europe | 1615 (7) |
| Southern Europe | 3423 (15) |
| Education, | |
| Primary school | 2359 (11) |
| Some high school/technical school | 8568 (39) |
| Completed high school/technical school | 2336 (10) |
| Tertiary/diploma/degree | 8913 (40) |
| Baseline marital status, | |
| Married/de facto | 16,463 (74) |
| Single | 2055 (9) |
| Separated/divorced | 2273 (10) |
| Widowed | 1385 (6) |
| Baseline SEIFA, | |
| 1st quintile | 3217 (15) |
| 2nd quintile | 3920 (18) |
| 3rd quintile | 3417 (15) |
| 4th quintile | 4507 (20) |
| 5th quintile | 7115 (32) |
| Baseline drinking status, | |
| Lifetime abstainer | 5541 (25) |
| Former drinker | 2243 (10) |
| Drinker | 14,392 (65) |
| Baseline smoking status, | |
| Never smoked | 13,421 (40) |
| Former smoker | 6846 (31) |
| Smoker | 1909 (9) |
| Baseline comorbidities, | |
| Cardiometabolic comorbidities | 4688 (21) |
| Arthritis | 6377 (29) |
| Physical activity, | |
| Inactive | 1417 (7) |
| Insufficiently active | 4837 (22) |
| Sufficiently active | 15,493 (71) |
| Kessler Psychological Distress Scale, | |
| Likely to be well | 19,538 (88) |
| Likely to have a mild disorder | 1636 (7) |
| Likely to have a moderate disorder | 623 (3) |
| Likely to have a severe disorder | 379 (2) |
Data are presented as mean (SD) for continuous variables (age, BMI, mental health score), and n (%) for categorical variables (sex, education, socio-economic index, employment, smoking status, alcohol intake, physical activity and comorbidities)
BMI body mass index, SEIFA socio-economic index of areas
Frequency and percentage of responses to individual psychological distress items
| None of the time | A little of the time | Some of the time | Most of time | All of the time | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Felt tired for no reason | 9155 (41) | 7095 (32) | 4475 (20) | 1209 (6) | 242 (1) |
| Felt nervous | 10,838 (49) | 7531 (34) | 2998 (14) | 601 (3) | 208 (1) |
| So nervous, could not be calmed | 20,090 (91) | 1458 (7) | 438 (2) | 123 (1) | 67 (0.3) |
| Felt hopeless | 18,246 (82) | 2831 (13) | 843 (4) | 181 (1) | 75 (0.3) |
| Felt restless or fidgety | 12,680 (57) | 7058 (32) | 2034 (9) | 313 (1) | 91 (0.4) |
| So restless, could not sit still | 18,337 (83) | 2726 (12) | 826 (4) | 193 (1) | 94 (0.4) |
| Felt depressed | 13,697 (62) | 6064 (27) | 1902 (9) | 395 (2) | 118 (1) |
| Felt everything an effort | 12,480 (56) | 6760 (31) | 2128 (10) | 639 (3) | 169 (1) |
| So sad, could not cheer up | 18,679 (84) | 2489 (11) | 723 (3) | 210 (1) | 75 (0.3) |
| Felt worthless | 19,085 (86) | 2192 (10) | 617 (3) | 193 (1) | 89 (0.4) |
Fig. 2Dose–response relations for physical activity domains and television viewing time with psychological distress measured with the K-10. The solid line represents the regression coefficient, and the shaded area represents the 95% confidence interval. Higher transport and leisure physical activity were associated with less psychological distress. There were no clear associations for occupational or household physical activity. Higher levels of television viewing time were associated with more psychological distress. Associations were adjusted for age, sex, country of birth, education, marital status, socio-economic index of areas, alcohol consumption, smoking status, comorbidities and working status
Fig. 3Sex-specific dose–response relationship for physical activity domains and television viewing time with psychological distress measured with the K-10. The solid line represents the regression coefficient, and the shaded area represents the 95% confidence interval. Associations were adjusted for age, sex, country of birth, education, marital status, socio-economic index of areas, alcohol consumption, smoking status, comorbidities and working status